Only if they cross the event horizon. When they do, there is no turning around.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
Yes, everything can be sucked in to a black hole, even light
No way, man.Doubt it. But just in case you had better hang on to something tight.If you went close enough you would be sucked into a black hole and could not get out.
No, it is not possible for an astronaut to be sucked into a black hole. Black holes are extremely far away and astronauts do not travel close enough to them. Additionally, the gravitational pull of a black hole is so strong that no known force or technology could overcome it.
In a black hole, all matter and energy that crosses the event horizon gets sucked in due to the immense gravitational pull. This includes light, particles, and even information, which becomes trapped within the black hole's singularity at the center.
Objects which approach a black hole will get sucked into it.
Objects which approach a black hole will get sucked into it.
if you get to close
Yes. Objects which get too close to a black hole can be drawn into it by its gravitational pull and thereby disappear. Even light can get "sucked in", which is why they are called black holes.
Anything and anyone that ventures too close to a black hole can be pulled into it.
Simply because there is none close enough to do that.
it gets sucked up
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
Yes, everything can be sucked in to a black hole, even light
No, it is not possible to survive being sucked into a black hole due to the extreme gravitational forces and intense tidal forces that would tear apart anything that gets too close.
You could get sucked up by a black hole if you were close enough to feel its gravitational pull more strongly than another force to counterbalance it which would otherwise prevent you from getting sucked inside, such as, for example the orbital inertia which prevents the stars in our galaxy, including the Sun, from getting sucked into the Milky Way's central supermassive black hole.
No way, man.Doubt it. But just in case you had better hang on to something tight.If you went close enough you would be sucked into a black hole and could not get out.