Black holes do not die but they can evaporate.
Black hole occurs when a star dies. It is a location in space that possesses so much gravity, nothing can escape its pull, not even light.
After black holes, there is not much known in terms of what comes next. Some theories suggest that black holes can evaporate over time through a process called Hawking radiation, eventually leading to their disappearance. Others speculate about the possibility of black holes merging together or transforming into different types of celestial objects. Further research is needed to better understand the fate of black holes and what may come after them.
No. Only the most massive stars form black holes. When the sun dies it will form a white dwarf.
The most massive stars will die as black holes.
Ergoregion
No. Most black holes form when an extremely massive star dies and the core collapses, becoming a black hole.
They become black holes.
Black hole occurs when a star dies. It is a location in space that possesses so much gravity, nothing can escape its pull, not even light.
Most Black Holes are created when a star that has 20 times the mass of our sun dies. In a stars life there is a constant war between pressure pushing out and gravity pulling in and when it dies it the outer part is thrown into space and the inner core collapses into itself, creating a black hole.
Black holes came from old big stars that went supernova as it dies. Supernova causes the star to collapse into a black hole
After black holes, there is not much known in terms of what comes next. Some theories suggest that black holes can evaporate over time through a process called Hawking radiation, eventually leading to their disappearance. Others speculate about the possibility of black holes merging together or transforming into different types of celestial objects. Further research is needed to better understand the fate of black holes and what may come after them.
No. Only the most massive stars form black holes. When the sun dies it will form a white dwarf.
Supernova happens when a star that is at least 3 times larger than our sun dies, it will be crush by its own gravity. Then boom, supernova. Then the star acts like a sponge, it will get bigger. That star is not a star anymore, it is a black hole.
stellar black holes were stars (these are large)primordial black holes were pieces of the big bang (these are microscopic)
No, they form whenever a star dies, which can happen from two seconds after another black hole forms, or it could be 100 years before the next one forms. Point: They form at random. Answer: Contrary to the previous answer black holes do not form every time a star dies. For the formation of a black hole the star needs to be large (in terms of stars as a whole - our own Sun is too small to become a Black Hole).
No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.
There are no black holes in our solar system