No. Any energy that enters a black hole simply becomes part of its mass. This only makes the black hole's gravity stronger.
A black hole has a much larger mass than a planet. The mass of a black hole, however, is contained in a point that is smaller than some fundamental particles. The event horizon of a typical stellar mass black hole is much smaller than any planet, but the event horizons of supermassive black holes are much larger.
There are no known black holes near Saturn. The nearest known black holes are much further away in our galaxy. Saturn does have its own moons and rings, but black holes are not typically found in such close proximity to planets.
A white hole is a theoretical region of spacetime that expels matter and energy, whereas a black hole is a region where matter and light cannot escape from. They are considered opposites due to their behavior, but white holes have not been observed in nature.
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.
Not much. The closest (known) black hole is at a distance of about 3000 light-years.
Yes, there is such thing as a black hole, they are very mysterious and very, very, very hard to see. But, scientists don't try to "look" for black holes, they detect them with radars that search for vibrations in space. Scientists look for these vibrations because the black holes give off this energy with gigantic force that pulls you into the center. It has so much energy and force that it vibrates. So, yes there are such things as black holes.
Black Hole simply cannot be destroyed because Black holes have so much Gravity That even light cannot pass or go from near the black holes. Black Holes pull the object passing from 10,000,00 (10 Lakh) away from them. So nobody can go near them to destroy it
A black hole has a much larger mass than a planet. The mass of a black hole, however, is contained in a point that is smaller than some fundamental particles. The event horizon of a typical stellar mass black hole is much smaller than any planet, but the event horizons of supermassive black holes are much larger.
There are no known black holes near Saturn. The nearest known black holes are much further away in our galaxy. Saturn does have its own moons and rings, but black holes are not typically found in such close proximity to planets.
A white hole is a theoretical region of spacetime that expels matter and energy, whereas a black hole is a region where matter and light cannot escape from. They are considered opposites due to their behavior, but white holes have not been observed in nature.
Black holes are sort of the final stage of stellar evolution; they don't form much else. Two black holes may merge to form a larger one, and after a very, very long time, they will evaporate.
They will gradually evaporate, due to Hawking radiation. At the current stage of the Universe, black holes of the mass of a star will acquire mass much, much faster than they evaporate - even if they only absorb the background radiation. In the far, far future, such black holes can slowly 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.
It is known what will happen. You will get sucked up! But before you get sucked up, Black Holes give flicker of black hot gas. Black Holes have so much power that they can't control it. So that's why they suck up everything in their path. Fun Fact: Black Holes are actually stars that died and contain so much power!!
Not much. The closest (known) black hole is at a distance of about 3000 light-years.
Basically a black hole is a star, well a blue star most likely. A blue star will get bigger and explode in what's called a super nova. If there's still enough of the star left it will squash itself down into an atom! Pretty Small! A black hole pulls things in by gravity, when something gets smaller the more gravity it has so imagine how much gravity the squashed up star would have! So basically black holes do exist.
Basically a black hole is a star, well a blue star most likely. A blue star will get bigger and explode in what's called a super nova. If there's still enough of the star left it will squash itself down into an atom! Pretty Small! A black hole pulls things in by gravity, when something gets smaller the more gravity it has so imagine how much gravity the squashed up star would have! So basically black holes do exist.