Technically yes, realistically, probably not. The best measure of the size of a black hole is the size of the event horizon. That we know of, black holes fall into two general categories: stellar mass black holes and supermassive black holes. The diameter of the event horizon is directly proportional to the mass. Stellar mass black holes range in mass from about 3 to 30 times the mass of the sun, with diameters several miles to several tens of miles. Supermassive black holes are millions to billions times the mass of the sun and are millions to billions of miles across. A black hole with roughly the mass of Saturn would have an event horizon about as wide as an adult human is tall, but there is no known way for an object of that mass to become a black hole.
After a black hole
Well if your comparing the smallest black hole knowen to humans to the Earth YES THEY ARE BIG but there is no definant diameter or size considering that all black holes are unique in all three size diameter and gravataional pull.
No person has ever gone to a black hole. Black holes are extremely dense and have gravitational forces so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape them. It is physically impossible for a human to survive a journey to a black hole.
In Pokemon Black, the big hole in Lacunosa Town can be found at the north exit of the town, near the entrance of Route 12. It serves as the entrance to the Giant Chasm, a significant area in the game.
Big Bang: When space started. Gas, dust and rock particles explode from it and eventually forms celestial bodies. Black Hole: When a star dies or loses its brightness, develops into a dead star or a black hole.
No. No black hole is big enough to do that.
Actually one interpretation of the big bang is as a white hole, the inverse of a black hole.
A black hole can,but it is very rare for a black hole big enough to swallow Earth.
A black hole sucks anything and everything that is in its gravitational pull.
both of the black hole will join together as one big black hole. they can either have a direct hit or both spin, twirling into each other until it create a new super big black hole.
If you jumped into a black hole, you would be stretched into human spaghetti.
No. The Big Bang was an event, not a material thing. (There are plenty of other ways in which it is utterly unlike a black hole as well.)
no black holes are stars
scientists think that the Big Bang which generated the univerese waas the consequence of the explosion of a massive black hole. so the big bang
NO BIG NO
This is by RaJ bHANDAL
YES