No, dark matter is not a black hole. Each one is a separate cosmic phenomenon. Use the links below to find out about each one.
The Black Hole will explode because the gravity of a Black Hole is formed by the matter that is in the process of going intothe Black Hole, and not that matter that has already gone inside.
There is no definite boundary for matter not being pulled toward a black hole. At large distances the effects of a black hole's gravity are not different from that of a different object of the same mass. How far out a black hole's gravity is dominant depends on that black hole's mass and its proximity to other massive objects.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
A black hole absorbs everything it sucks in, including matter and light. Once something crosses the event horizon of a black hole, it is unable to escape and is thought to be crushed into a point of infinite density at the singularity.
If say in the event of gas interacting with a black hole in a nova then fusion would occur as matter is accreted into the black hole but when any matter pierces the event horizon there is no way of escape unless it escapes as hawking radiation.
The Black Hole will explode because the gravity of a Black Hole is formed by the matter that is in the process of going intothe Black Hole, and not that matter that has already gone inside.
The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.
All the matter that collapsed into the black hole, as well as any matter that fell into the black hole after the initial collapse. The only distinguishable part of such matter is its mass - any structures of matter, even atoms, get destroyed.
You can't see the black hole but you can see its inflence on its environment. (You can see matter that is sucked into the black hole)
Any matter that enters the black hole will be destroyed. Also, it will increase the black hole's size.
No. If no matter enters a black hole it will actually slowly lose mass and shrink via Hawking radiation. A black hole will gain mass if matter fals into, which will cause the event horizon to grow.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
There is no definite boundary for matter not being pulled toward a black hole. At large distances the effects of a black hole's gravity are not different from that of a different object of the same mass. How far out a black hole's gravity is dominant depends on that black hole's mass and its proximity to other massive objects.
They know because the effect the black hole has on other matter.
the black hole is a matter in outer space that is made by the force of gravity
Probably the mass of the black hole would increase, just as when normal matter falls in.
A black hole absorbs everything it sucks in, including matter and light. Once something crosses the event horizon of a black hole, it is unable to escape and is thought to be crushed into a point of infinite density at the singularity.