Not exactly. The external gravitational field of a black hole (at a point quite far away from it) is essentially like that of any massive body, so it is possible for an object to remain in orbit around a black hole, or even to escape from the orbit into space. However, once an object enters a certain zone around the black hole (the boundary of this zone is called the event horizon) there is no way it can escape from the gravitational field, because beyond this event horizon spacetime is so highly curved by the gravitational field that all paths the object can take, point inwards to the center of the black hole (the singularity). Once an object is past the event horizon, it is certainly destroyed by the black hole's intense gravitation.
A black hole could potentially consume Jupiter if it entered the black hole's event horizon, the point of no return. However, the likelihood of Jupiter encountering a black hole and being sucked up is extremely low due to the vast distances between objects in space.
Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.
A black hole can attract and consume matter and light due to its strong gravitational pull. It can also emit radiation known as Hawking radiation, and potentially merge with other black holes to form larger ones.
If a black hole came close to our Earth, it would most definitely suck it in. But we wouldn't have much to worry about, since the x-rays radiating from the accretion disk surrounding a black hole would kill all life on our planet long before the black hole got here.
black hole got it's name because when look at a black hole, you only see black. also if you drop an item in the black hole the item is gone because there is a hole in there. so that's how black hole get's its name
A black hole doesn't "suck" things in. It pulls them in with it's immense gravity. In order to suck something in, there must be something to fill in empty space such as air.
As soon as It's born. The gravitational force of the Black Hole will pull matter into it.
In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
I think that refers to a big money waste/things that suck in money.
A black hole will "suck things up" for the same reason that the Sun, or Jupiter, or Earth, "suck things up", although I would prefer the term "attracts things gravitationally". All those objects attract things thanks to their gravitational attraction - this, in turn, is related to its mass, i.e., more massive objects have a larger gravitational attraction.
it is said that there are black holes in space which we have discovered is true and how gravity realates to a black hole is well, a black hole is said to suck away other universes we have not discovered yet gravity pulls things to the ground and a black hole uses that same pull force to suck in universes
Gravity is the only reason a black hole pulls things in. Nothing can escape a black hole, so gravity is its only way of affecting the outside world.
A black hole will "such things up" if such things get sufficiently close to the black hole. This is a result of its gravity. Similarly, our Sun will "suck things up" if they get too close - for example, a comet might crash onto the Sun; the comet's mass will increase the mass of the Sun. Please note that if, for example, our Sun becomes a black hole (it probably won't, since it doesn't have enough mass for that), without changing its mass in the process, the Earth will continue orbiting the black hole as it orbited the Sun before. It will NOT be "sucked up" in the process - the black hole's gravitational attraction would be the same as the Sun's attraction before becoming a black hole.
Yes. The gravitational "Pull" of a black hole is so intense that EM radiation is pulled into it, and even time is warped. However, black holes do not "suck in" anything. A black hole is a region of space toward which things are forced. So light is actually pushed, rather than pulled, toward a black hole.
A black hole doesn't literally suck. A black hole pulls things closer to it. And it does this the same way that we stay on the earth--- gravity. A singularity, a point with mass but no height, width or length is at the center of every black hole. This singularity is what has the gravitational strength to pull everything, even light, towards it. It does it all with an unfathomably strong gravitational pull.
A black hole doesn't actually "suck" things towards it. Rather it's so massive it's gravity "pulls" things towards it. As to your question yes a person could be pulled into a black hole. They would go through a process known as Spaghettification.
yes... it can because a black hole can even suck light in :) lol hope it helped.................................. c it can suck in nearley everything