As it gets close it will be torn apart, then when it falls past the event horizon the bits will disappear from our sight.
If you were to throw a clock into a black hole, the extreme gravitational pull would distort the perception of time on the clock. As the clock approaches the black hole's event horizon, time would appear to slow down for an observer outside the black hole. Eventually, the clock's information would be lost beyond the event horizon.
The object swallowed by the black hole is destroyed; its mass is added to the mass of the black hole.
They will merge to form a single black hole with the combined mass of the town that merged.
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 will not be a black hole in the moon today, tomorrow or forever (whenever that happens!)
If you were to throw a clock into a black hole, the extreme gravitational pull would distort the perception of time on the clock. As the clock approaches the black hole's event horizon, time would appear to slow down for an observer outside the black hole. Eventually, the clock's information would be lost beyond the event horizon.
In a black hole, gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. This means that whatever goes into a black hole is trapped inside forever, making the saying "what happens in a black hole stays in a black hole" true.
That's not exactly what happens. What really happens is that they just absorb each other and become a bigger black hole.
Any matter that enters the black hole will be destroyed. Also, it will increase the black hole's size.
The object swallowed by the black hole is destroyed; its mass is added to the mass of the black hole.
It evaporates.
evaporation
Its called a Super Black-hole and scientists believe it is what holds all galaxies together.
They will merge to form a single black hole with the combined mass of the town that merged.
It gets bent toward the black hole's singularity.
Objects which approach a black hole will get sucked into it.
The hole in a pencil sharpener is called the "shaving hole" or the "sharpening hole." This is where you insert the pencil to sharpen it.