No, a black hole definitely does not have infinite mass. In some mathematical models, there is an object called a singularity, inside a black hole, which has infinite density. That is not the same as infinite mass. If a finite mass is contained in zero volume, then the density becomes infinite. We do not have any real confirmation that such a thing as a singularity or an infinite density actually exist, but they may.
The object swallowed by the black hole is destroyed; its mass is added to the mass of the black hole.
They are called Black Holes or singularities.
The mass of a black hole can be measured by observing the orbits of objects around it, such as stars or gas clouds. By studying the gravitational effects of the black hole on these objects, astronomers can calculate its mass. Another method is to measure the distortion of light from objects behind the black hole, known as gravitational lensing, which can provide information about the black hole's mass.
That's basically the description of a black hole.
The center of a black hole, a locus of infinite density where matter is compressed into zero volume, is called a 'singularity.'
A black hole has infinite density.
No, a black hole definitely does not have infinite mass. In some mathematical models, there is an object called a singularity, inside a black hole, which has infinite density. That is not the same as infinite mass. If a finite mass is contained in zero volume, then the density becomes infinite. We do not have any real confirmation that such a thing as a singularity or an infinite density actually exist, but they may.
I has infinite mass but zero volume.
It is infinite
It's only infinite around the event horizon.
The object swallowed by the black hole is destroyed; its mass is added to the mass of the black hole.
The relationship between the mass of a black hole and its density is that as the mass of a black hole increases, its density also increases. This means that a black hole with a higher mass will have a higher density compared to a black hole with a lower mass.
There is no way to escape from a black hole because it's gravity is infinite.
If an object had infinite length, it would also have infinite mass, so everything in the universe would be attracted to it, turning the entire universe into a super giant black hole. In other words, no.
Yes, black holes have few properties - among them mass, spin, and charge. Black hole theory indicates that at the center of a non-spinning black hole is the singularity where the mass is concentrated, a point of infinite density and zero volume, considered to be point shaped. For a spinning black hole, the singularity is calculated to be ring-shaped. Not only does the black hole spin, but general relativity predicts that space itself will spin outside the black hole, a phenomenon referred to as frame dragging.
Yes. Intermediate-mass blackhole is a medium size black hole. Scientists have found stellar black holes and supermassive black holes but there is no prove that Intermediate-mass black type of black holes exist. My opinion is that they do exist because when a black hole is becoming a black hole supermassiveblack hole it will need to go though this stage of intermediate-mass black hole.
Its density becomes infinite. Except that what you have described is a black hole and the ordinary laws of physics and maths do not apply in or within the event horizon of a black hole.