You can get as close as you want, as long as your tangential speed is high enough
to maintain an orbit. Inside of some distance, that'll require the speed of light (or
more). The distance depends on the mass of the black hole.
Not all objects close to a black hole get sucked into it. The gravitational pull of a black hole depends on its mass, so objects need to get extremely close to be pulled in. Objects in stable orbits can continue to orbit the black hole without falling in.
Not directly. If large amounts of matter is falling into the black hole it will heat up and glow brightly. You could also potentially see the distortion of light around the black hole, but you'd have to get pretty close to see that.
A quasar is believed to have a supermassive black hole at its center. The radiation is emitted outside the black hole's event horizon - from matter that is falling into the black hole.
A quasar is a disk of superheated material falling into a supermassive black hole. The radiation from a quasar is so intense that it actually pushes matter away from the black hole, preventing it from falling in. This process limits how fast a black hole can grow.
No you would be stretched out and torn apart as soon as you got too close
Not all objects close to a black hole get sucked into it. The gravitational pull of a black hole depends on its mass, so objects need to get extremely close to be pulled in. Objects in stable orbits can continue to orbit the black hole without falling in.
You would die quickly, either before, or after, falling into the black hole, depending on the mass of the black hole.
Not directly. If large amounts of matter is falling into the black hole it will heat up and glow brightly. You could also potentially see the distortion of light around the black hole, but you'd have to get pretty close to see that.
If a star was "too close" to a black hole, that star would be captured by the black hole's gravity and be pulled into it.
A quasar is believed to have a supermassive black hole at its center. The radiation is emitted outside the black hole's event horizon - from matter that is falling into the black hole.
yes.
A quasar is a disk of superheated material falling into a supermassive black hole. The radiation from a quasar is so intense that it actually pushes matter away from the black hole, preventing it from falling in. This process limits how fast a black hole can grow.
if you get to close
No. Earth would be destroyed if a black hole came anywhere close to it.
Objects which approach a black hole will get sucked into it.
Objects which approach a black hole will get sucked into it.
That seems likely, considering the large number of black holes and of planets in the Universe. However, I am not aware of any specific observation of a planet falling into a black hole, for example. On the other hand, the likelyhood of a black hole getting close to Earth, withint any reasonable amount of time, is very low.