Black holes can destroy stars, so they'd have no trouble destroying a planet.
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.
Yes, and many planets have already been pulled into black holes.
Black holes aren't actually holes, they're just humongous 'objects' that are so big that they have huge gravitational pulls and therefore pull everything into themselves, hence the name 'holes'.
Black holes are black holes - they are totally different from anything else in the universe. Most black holes are formed from the collapsed cores of dead stars. There are supermassive black holes in most galaxies, but it is no known how they formed.
People know what black holes can do because of the aftermath. Stars and planets have been completely destroyed.
inside space is planets galaxies moons and black holes
inside space is planets galaxies moons and black holes
Yes.
Earth is a planet. Center's of galaxies sometimes contain black holes. Planets can't be black holes.
There is a force that unites the tides, planets and black holes. Tides are generally thought of as the rise and fall of the level of the oceans due to the gravitational effects of the moon and the sun. Planets have gravity proportional to their masses, and black holes are points of massive gravity. Gravity or its effects unite the three things listed.
Actually, the purpose of black holes is to absorb matter and spew it out into the universe to seed new galaxies, stars, planets and things. Black holes are the "cleaners" of the galaxy, in my opinion.
We have seem evidence of objects falling into black holes, but most of what we have seen is probably gas. We do not know of any planets that have falledn into black holes.
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.
Yes, and many planets have already been pulled into black holes.
According to Professor Spephen Hawking, black holes eventually evaporate.
No. Only planets have weather: It can't rain in space.
The only thing that can end up a black hole is a star with about ten times more mass than our Sun. Planets are nowhere near that massive.