You can't, if you call it in the black hole being inside the event horizon; that is if you mean inside the 'black' portion of the hole. If you say near the black hole, then it depends on how close and how much thrust, fuel and mass your ship has.
Basically there is no "next stage". Well, it is believed that a black hole will evaporate, but that will take a long, long time.
Black holes possess so much gravity that nothing can escape its pull and it is believed that at the heart of virtually every large galaxy lurks a supermassive black hole with a mass of a million to more than a billion times our Sun.
Scientists cannot be certain, as we have yet to experiment with a black hole, but they theorize that time would slow down relative to time far from the black hole.
No. The gravitational forces are so great that your body would be ripped apart long before you actually entered the black hole.
I don't think you could talk about a "day" on a black hole - for a start, nobody could survive in a black hole, to observe such a day. But if you refer to the rotation, one black hole has been observed that seems to spin over a thousand times per second. This rotation, of course, can be different for other black holes.
That depends a lot on the mass of the black hole. The smaller black holes will evaporate more quickly. A stellar black hole (a few times the mass of the Sun) is expected to live approximately 1066 years, while a supermassive black hole might survive something like 10100 years before evaporating completely.
For all practical purposes, such an object will exist forever.
If a black hole has spin, it will spin forever.
Basically there is no "next stage". Well, it is believed that a black hole will evaporate, but that will take a long, long time.
Black holes possess so much gravity that nothing can escape its pull and it is believed that at the heart of virtually every large galaxy lurks a supermassive black hole with a mass of a million to more than a billion times our Sun.
probably not long.My Answer:This is one of those questions that will depend on where you are observing from. If you are the one in a black hole and the most basic measure of time and death are used: Once you are in the Black hole your death would be instant.Traveling into the hole and dieing may take virtually forever because of the way a Black Hole distorts time and gravity.If you could figure out how to watch from out side no human could live long enough to see a person die and confirm that he/she was dead. Again this is due to distortion of time.
The sun should not become a black hole. It does not have sufficient mass to undergo the necessary collapse.
It lasts until evaporated.
By building a machine that travels through space (like a rocket), and fly it against the direction of the Black Hole. For as long as the thrust of your rocket is above the gravitational pull of the Black Hole, you are away.
No human has ever come near a black hole. If one did, the intense gravitational pull of the black hole would pull them in and tear them to atoms, long before they reached the event horizon.
Scientists cannot be certain, as we have yet to experiment with a black hole, but they theorize that time would slow down relative to time far from the black hole.
If you jumped into an "ordinary" Schwarzschild black hole, you would be crushed into a long line of particles, which means death by a black hole. If you jumped into a Kerr black hole, the same process may occur, but the only thing different is that a Kerr black hole spins, and a Schwarzschild black hole does not. That answer needs a bit more detail. Please use the "related link" below.