Well this is my thoughts and belief about the black hole. I share almost the same believe as you do, however from my research that i have done on space,time and mass. I have concluded that the black hole is a puncture in space, but not of space, which means that the void left after the puncture is an empty opening into space that no mass,time or space exists in that zone, this is why the laws of physics break down, but you are probably thinking that is a radical idea, well it may sound like that but let me clear things up. Imagine you have an A4 paper, this A4 paper will be space, imagine you have mass or object on that paper, you take a pencil and anywhere around that paper you puncture a hole into the paper with all the pressure that you have put into it, now look at this, because of the pressure you applied on your pencil, you have just punctured a hole into the paper, and everything that was once their is now around that paper hole area. So imagine, all that pressure that gravity has to offer after the explosion of a super star, the gravity collapses to a point where the pressure is so strong and like the pencil that punctured the paper, it will eventually puncture space itself, space is a property just like time and mass, it curves when mass is present. Another reason to support this theory is, since time is frozen in a black hole then space does not exist either, and why is that ? well if time and space are synchronized together, the faster you go the slower time is for you which is known as time dilation which was Einsteins theory, so what if time is frozen ? then space shouldn't exist at all. In other words, the information is never sucked in or taken by the black hole, but instead it is stored in a location where the gravitational pull of the black hole is holding it in place, so that it does not escape, and what you are really looking at when you look at a black hole is basically a voice where no laws of physics take place at all since it is not really the space we know of but a void of emptiness.
While there are no direct videos of black holes in space, astronomers have used telescopes to capture images of the matter surrounding black holes, known as the black hole's accretion disk. These images help us study black holes and their properties, but we cannot directly see the black hole itself due to its nature of trapping light.
If it had a radius, then it wouldn't be a singularity. The event-horizon surrounding a black hole has a radius, which depends on the black hole's mass. But the singularity itself has no radius.
No. A black hole may be the remnant of the core of what was once a blue star, but the black hole itself is as black as anything can possibly be.
After a black hole forms, it continues to exist in space, exerting a strong gravitational pull on surrounding matter. Anything that gets too close to a black hole, including light, cannot escape its gravitational grasp and is consumed. Black holes can continue to grow in size by absorbing matter and merging with other black holes.
A puncture.
The black hole itself cannot be seen, however, its pulling effects of the surrounding area can be seen.
When an object falls into a black hole, it adds to the mass of the black hole, increasing its gravitational pull. This affects the surrounding space-time by warping it even more, causing objects nearby to be pulled in as well. Gravity from a black hole does not "escape" in the traditional sense, but rather continues to influence the space-time around it, shaping the movement of objects in its vicinity.
Inside a black hole, matter is crushed to a point of infinite density called a singularity. The intense gravitational pull of a black hole warps space-time, causing it to curve inwards. This affects the surrounding space-time by distorting the fabric of the universe and trapping anything that gets too close, including light.
A black hole is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it. It is formed when a massive star collapses in on itself. The anatomy of a black hole includes a singularity at its center, surrounded by an event horizon, which is the point of no return. The intense gravity of a black hole warps space-time around it, causing time to slow down and space to be distorted. This influence can affect the motion of nearby objects and even cause them to be pulled into the black hole.
No, a black hole is not actually a hole in space. It is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it.
the black hole is a matter in outer space that is made by the force of gravity
if there is light surrounding a black hole it is normally from material entering into the event horizon of the black hole.
While there are no direct videos of black holes in space, astronomers have used telescopes to capture images of the matter surrounding black holes, known as the black hole's accretion disk. These images help us study black holes and their properties, but we cannot directly see the black hole itself due to its nature of trapping light.
Yes, a black hole could travel through space.
Obvisouly it is not a black hole! :)
Yes, black holes can have magnetic fields. These magnetic fields can affect the surrounding environment by influencing the behavior of matter and radiation near the black hole. The magnetic fields can cause particles to spiral around the black hole, emit radiation, and create powerful jets of material that shoot out into space.
As the planet is approaching a black hole due to the immense gravitational pull on the objects surrounding it, the planet revolves around the black hole until it falls into the black hole.