Black holes are not considered to be living organisms. Even in the metaphorical sense, they are often associated with "dead" stars.
No non-fiction person has ever gone into a black hole.
No, it is not currently possible to control or manipulate the power of a black hole. Black holes are extremely massive objects with such strong gravitational forces that even light cannot escape from them, making them one of the most powerful forces in the universe.
In the middle of a black hole, there is a single point of matter called a singularity. This is where space-time actually stops and nothing is beyond this point. Anything and everything that gets sucked up in the black hole goes here.
Into the black hole's singularity.
The object swallowed by the black hole is destroyed; its mass is added to the mass of the black hole.
A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.
it would just riped apart in pieces and disappear
Living creatures are going to die, and non living stuffs will never die. They will vanish someday when the sun stops converting hydrogen into helium, and when the Universe will transform itself into a huge black hole.
No non-fiction person has ever gone into a black hole.
No non-fictional astronomical body know as black circle. If the question is meant to employ the term 'black hole' in space, what a black hole does is to exist.
Physicist Karl Schwarzchild is credited with the first exact solution to Einstein's field equations from general relativity for a non-rotating black hole. In a loose sense an uncharged non-rotation black hole might thus be referred to as the Schwarzchild type; but more strictly speaking the solution itself bears his name (the Schwarzchild solution) or the calculated radius of the black hole's event horizon (Schwarzchild radius), etc.
There might be because a black hole has Hydrogen and Helium. These chemicals have bacteria and bacteria is a living thing. So there might be, I'm not saying there is totally.
Perhaps you mean Schwarzschild metric? I have never heard of the Shorelchild metric and cannot find anything relating to it. A black hole with a Schwarszchild metric is a black hole with no angular velocity (Non-rotational) and no charge. Since it's impossible to perceive a black hole it looks no different from any other black hole.
Rotating is spinning around. non rotating isn't, The earth would be sucked into the sun if it collapsed into a black hole.
Sadly, absolutely nothing can withstand living in a black hole.. In fact, you would need infinite energy just to stay in its orbit. So you cant live in a black hole, but you might be able to live close to it.
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.
The event horizon is the "point of no return" - nothing inside that can escape. In the simplest case (of a non-rotating black hole), this is a sphere, at a certain distance from the black hole's center. The size of the black hole is often taken to be the size of the event horizon.