Space occupied by a dead star. ______________ Surely you can come up with a more complex question than that! See links for a start. From the excellent Wikipedia article: While general relativity describes a black hole as a region of empty space with a pointlike singularity at the center and an event horizon at the outer edge, the description changes when the effects of quantum mechanics are taken into account. Research on this subject indicates that, rather than holding captured matter forever, black holes may slowly leak a form of thermal energy called Hawking radiation. However, the final, correct description of black holes, requiring a theory of quantum gravity, is unknown.
Some topics related to black holes:Stellar evolutionPhysicsAstronomyGravityQuantum physics
Define a "hyper black hole". A "Hyper Black Hole" is a massive "Black hole" thought to be created by many Black holes merging together. Theological Physics now believe that most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, have a "Hyper Black Hole" in the center
A black hole is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. The "thing" inside a black hole is thought to be a singularity, a point of infinite density where the laws of physics as we currently understand them break down.
No, based on our current understanding of physics, a spacecraft would not survive traveling through a black hole. The intense gravitational forces would stretch and compress the spacecraft to the point of destruction.
It is currently not possible to stop the gravitational pull of a black hole due to its immense mass and the curvature of spacetime it creates. The only known way to escape the pull of a black hole is to travel faster than the speed of light, which is not achievable according to our current understanding of physics.
A black hole relates to physics, because it "bends" the laws of physics. Noone really knows what a black hole does. It bends the law of gravitation (a black hole has way too much gravity).
what is black hole
what is black hole
No - at least no black holes as defined by physics.
cosmology,physics,(black hole),mathematics
cosmology,physics,(black hole),mathematics
Some topics related to black holes:Stellar evolutionPhysicsAstronomyGravityQuantum physics
Define a "hyper black hole". A "Hyper Black Hole" is a massive "Black hole" thought to be created by many Black holes merging together. Theological Physics now believe that most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, have a "Hyper Black Hole" in the center
In theory yes. A black hole is assumed to be a somewhat spherical shape, so using geometry you could find the center. From what we think we know about black holes, yes they violate the laws of physics from the moment the event horizon (the boundary) passed.
Because the physics within a black hole is so extreme, current theories can't really describe in detail what goes inside a black hole, especially near the singularity.
Creating a black hole is not currently possible with our current technology and understanding of physics. Black holes are formed from the collapse of massive stars, and the conditions required for their creation are extreme and beyond our current capabilities.
In actuality nothing is known about the insides of a black hole. But in theory, at the center of a black hole is a region of infinite density and very strong gravitational pull that it breaks down any established laws of physics. this region is called a singularity.