Having a black hole near your tonsils would be highly unlikely as black holes are typically formed from the remnants of massive stars. However, if one were somehow present, it would exert a tremendous gravitational force, causing catastrophic effects on your body such as tidal forces tearing you apart and extreme stretching due to the gravitational pull.
The speed of light is a constant, it does not matter in or out of a black hole.
Not really.
You can't, if you call it in the black hole being inside the event horizon; that is if you mean inside the 'black' portion of the hole. If you say near the black hole, then it depends on how close and how much thrust, fuel and mass your ship has.
Spaghettification. This is when an object goes near a massive body such as a black hole gets pulled apart. See the links below. (Humor aside, there really isn't a specific term for such an event, other than "going near a black hole.")
if you go close enough to a black hole you can get stretched to death the end
What will happen depends on how near you get. If you cross the event horizon, you will fall into the gravity well of the black hole and life as you know it will be over. You will disappear from the universe, never to be seen again.
Once an object exits a black hole, it continues to move away from the black hole due to its momentum. The object may be altered by the extreme gravitational forces near the black hole, but it will no longer be trapped by its intense gravitational pull.
No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.
Not sure what you mean by swim, as black holes are in space, but if one gets to close to a black hole they would inevitably "sucked" in and all time would basically stop with no hope of escape
Space and time becomes stretched (and twisted) near a black hole. This is known as "frame dragging".
You can't - that's the whole idea of a black hole. Don't get near a black hole in the first place.
You get the shark to come near you and follow you to the black hole, then when you get to the black hole you turn a let the shark in. Have fun!
No. Pluto is nowhere near massive enough to become a black hole.
Having a black hole near your tonsils would be highly unlikely as black holes are typically formed from the remnants of massive stars. However, if one were somehow present, it would exert a tremendous gravitational force, causing catastrophic effects on your body such as tidal forces tearing you apart and extreme stretching due to the gravitational pull.
The speed of light is a constant, it does not matter in or out of a black hole.
Not really.