The light that the Black Hole sucks up ends up in another part of the Universe . (Or at least that's what the scientists hypothesis. A black hole is not a portal, it is a star core that uses its immense gravity to pull in anything nearby. When something is pulled in, it's traped in the center and crushed under the intense gravity.
Black holes cannot be directly observed because they do not give off any radiation (including light). Instead, they are detected based on indirect evidence, such as the effect of the black hole's gravitational interaction with it's surroundings.
The distance from a black hole to the sun can vary widely depending on the specific black hole and its location in the universe. Black holes can be hundreds to billions of light-years away from our solar system.
Gravity, the force that keeps things from flying off our planet, is also the force that prevents light from leaving a black hole. A black hole is presumed to consist of matter so densely compacted that its gravitational force is sufficient to hold back even the highest energy particles known.
When light enters the box through the hole, it reflects off the white walls and is absorbed multiple times. This absorption reduces the intensity of the light reaching our eyes, making it appear black inside. The white walls scatter and diffuse the light, preventing it from bouncing back out the hole.
Well if you get stuck or sucked in a black hole, you're doomed. Black holes don't suck you in, they pull you in with their immense gravitational pull. Black holes are so powerful that they can pull in light, and that can't even get out. If a human is pulled into a black hole, you would quickly start being pulled apart. Starting with your fingers would be pulled off and so on. I know this is a little disturbing. The best advice I can give you is to stay away from black holes. I know all this and I'm eleven. Hope this helps.
Black holes cannot be directly observed because they do not give off any radiation (including light). Instead, they are detected based on indirect evidence, such as the effect of the black hole's gravitational interaction with it's surroundings.
You 'see' things when light (photons) are reflected off a surface, and absorbed by your retina. A black hole's gravitational field is so strong, that the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light. Any photons within a certain radius will be unable to escape. Since no photons are being emitted, the black hole appears black and gives off no light.
Perfect black would be the inability for any light at all to reflect off the surface. A black hole is black because light cannot escape the gravitational pull.
No a plant will die and shrink because of the UV rays that the black light give off.
Its Gamma burst Ray which comes from the center of the universe.
Probably not a star. Could be a black hole, asteroid, or other spacial object.
The distance from a black hole to the sun can vary widely depending on the specific black hole and its location in the universe. Black holes can be hundreds to billions of light-years away from our solar system.
No. The gravity of a black hole is so extreme that nothing can escape, not even light. Since we humans see things based on the light that bounces off of them or radiates away from them, black holes are invisible. In fact, the only way we can detect a black hole at all is indirectly, based on its gravity.
Gravity, the force that keeps things from flying off our planet, is also the force that prevents light from leaving a black hole. A black hole is presumed to consist of matter so densely compacted that its gravitational force is sufficient to hold back even the highest energy particles known.
While black holes give off radio waves, the fact that no light can escape, or be reflected off of, black holes makes them completely invisible to any regular light-capturing device.
When light enters the box through the hole, it reflects off the white walls and is absorbed multiple times. This absorption reduces the intensity of the light reaching our eyes, making it appear black inside. The white walls scatter and diffuse the light, preventing it from bouncing back out the hole.
Well if you get stuck or sucked in a black hole, you're doomed. Black holes don't suck you in, they pull you in with their immense gravitational pull. Black holes are so powerful that they can pull in light, and that can't even get out. If a human is pulled into a black hole, you would quickly start being pulled apart. Starting with your fingers would be pulled off and so on. I know this is a little disturbing. The best advice I can give you is to stay away from black holes. I know all this and I'm eleven. Hope this helps.