Given the extreme difficulty of entering a black hole, due to its highly hazardous gravity prone to shred infalling matter and turning it into intensely hot plasma spinning at relativistic speeds - and not to mention the difficulty of even locating one given the nearest one to Earth is thousands of light years distant - pretty much any action "in" a black hole might fall into the realm of fiction.
But by way of example, one fictional "to do" might be to open up a beauty shop strictly for fire-breathing left-handed Eskimo midgets powered entirely by static electricity generated on a treadmill operated by a troop of pangolins (spiny anteaters). Given the criteria above, the clientele might evidence a somewhat sparse attendance so it might not be a practical business model. Another fictional to-do might be to perform splenectomies on leprechauns. Once you get the idea, a world of possibilities opens up...
A black hole is a type of star with excessive gravity. Here are some sentences.The star was sucked into the black hole close by.A black hole will even absorb light.The scientist is studying a black hole.
A black hole contains a large amount of matter, compressed in an incredibly small space.
Some topics related to black holes:Stellar evolutionPhysicsAstronomyGravityQuantum physics
That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.
The answer is, if a black hole 'ate' another black hole, it would gain more mass, therefore it's event horizon(or area of influence) would increase. Once you cross the 'event horizon' it's a gravitational no return. Per the White Hole: It is found in theoretical science only. There has no proof of any white hole found (there has for black holes.) White hole ideas are not accepted by mainstream physicists, but a white hole may be the end product of the transmission of black hole matter in some part of the universe. If white holes exist the connection of a black hole to a white hole might actually be a wormhole or tunnel through 3 dimensional space. Black holes do have size and mass: if they did not have size, the difference in the size of the event horizon between black holes would not exist. The size of a black hole can be defined several ways - the gravitational force it generates (the mass), the physical size of the even horizon, or the size of an accretion disk (if there is one.) The problem most people have with the size of a black hole is that the very center of the black hole is a singularity: something that has no physical properties we can understand: it is so different that the word had to be made to describe it. In the sphere shells around the black hole are: the rest of the universe, "empty" space, matter and energy being bent (but not falling into the black hole), matter and energy falling into the black hole, (these 2 often show as an accretion disk), then the event horizon where the gravitational force is so strong now that even light can no longer escape, then the inner shell after the event horizon and this falls all the way down to the center, the singularity. Everything but the singularity has size, mass and is hot compared to the rest of hte universe (empty space again.) A black hole is an amazing thing but not a magical thing - it would probably be better if we used the term earler used - frozen star: one that no longer gives off heat.
yes. but the intense gravity is so strong it seems to bend time so slowly some people believe that there is no time in a black hole I WOULD JUST LIKE TO POINT OUT that time does exist in a black hole it is just extremely slow on another note if time did not exist in a black hole then a black hole would not suck things into it. so time does exist in a black hole.
No, but some stars end their life by becoming a black hole.
No, a black hole is not some sifi mysterious thing that causes unknown things to occur, like complete realities. It is simply a massive source of gravity, so massive that light cannot escape it.
A black hole is a type of star with excessive gravity. Here are some sentences.The star was sucked into the black hole close by.A black hole will even absorb light.The scientist is studying a black hole.
Your question can't be answered in the way you wrote it. Astrophysicists think there's a massive black hole at the centre of our Milky Way galaxy, and they've spotted things that could be black holes in some solar systems in our galaxy. Further to this, you have dark energy and dark matter for example, along with practically an infinite amount of other "things" that you could count.
Not all galaxies have a black hole at their center. Some galaxies, like our own Milky Way, do have a supermassive black hole at their center, while others do not.
Some stars become a black hole or a black dwarf.
A black hole contains a large amount of matter, compressed in an incredibly small space.
Some topics related to black holes:Stellar evolutionPhysicsAstronomyGravityQuantum physics
use black hole or some other magic or spell or trap card.especially black hole, it wipes out the whole field.
That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.
Their is not more info about this because there are no evidences of humans being sucked into black hole but once sucked in, the object which has been sucked in will not be able to escape out from black hole's event horizon as a black hole very very very very very strong gravitational field. But some scientists say that object which went into the black hole comes out through a white hole (which is just the opposite of black holes in all aspects)