These are called sun spots.
No. There are not black holes anywhere near our solar system. Even then, scientific models suggest that stellar-mass black holes, the smallest common type, must be at least 3 times more massive than the sun, so the sun would more likely orbit the black hole if one were nearby.
A black hole is much stronger than the sun in terms of its gravitational pull. Black holes have a gravitational force so strong that not even light can escape from them, while the sun's gravity is much weaker in comparison.
No. Only the most massive stars form black holes. When the sun dies it will form a white dwarf.
Black holes suck in everything around it for billions of miles, all of that matter is compressed into something smaller than a tennis ball. If you could calculate its weight, it would way many times the weight of our sun!
Dead stars are not necessarily black holes. Dead stars can become white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes depending on their mass. Only the most massive dead stars can collapse further to become black holes if they exceed the Chandrasekhar limit, around 1.4 times the mass of the Sun.
There are no black holes but there are dark areas known as Sun spots.
There are no black holes on the sun. Are you thinking of sunspots?
No. The apparent dark areas on the sun are not black holes; they are sunspots. Sunspots are areas of the sun's surface that are not as hot as their surroundings.
Black holes can be many different sizes. Therefore, there are some black holes that are bigger than the sun, and there are some that are smaller than the sun.
Black holes are that stars which has passed their all life or expired star and it absorb light of sun therefore cant reflect the ligh of sun, so its look like black holes.
The masses of black holes vary greatly. The lowest mass stellar black holes are about 3 times the mass of the sun. The most massive black holes are about 12 billion times the sun's mass.
No. There are not black holes anywhere near our solar system. Even then, scientific models suggest that stellar-mass black holes, the smallest common type, must be at least 3 times more massive than the sun, so the sun would more likely orbit the black hole if one were nearby.
A black hole is much stronger than the sun in terms of its gravitational pull. Black holes have a gravitational force so strong that not even light can escape from them, while the sun's gravity is much weaker in comparison.
No. Without matter there would be no black hole. The black holes confirmed to exist so far actually have a fairly large amount of matter (or mass) - at least 2-3 times the mass of our Sun. The largest black holes have millions or even billions of times the mass of our Sun.No. Without matter there would be no black hole. The black holes confirmed to exist so far actually have a fairly large amount of matter (or mass) - at least 2-3 times the mass of our Sun. The largest black holes have millions or even billions of times the mass of our Sun.No. Without matter there would be no black hole. The black holes confirmed to exist so far actually have a fairly large amount of matter (or mass) - at least 2-3 times the mass of our Sun. The largest black holes have millions or even billions of times the mass of our Sun.No. Without matter there would be no black hole. The black holes confirmed to exist so far actually have a fairly large amount of matter (or mass) - at least 2-3 times the mass of our Sun. The largest black holes have millions or even billions of times the mass of our Sun.
You cannot see our sun.
No. Only the most massive stars form black holes. When the sun dies it will form a white dwarf.
Black holes suck in everything around it for billions of miles, all of that matter is compressed into something smaller than a tennis ball. If you could calculate its weight, it would way many times the weight of our sun!