The mass of the black hole would increase in proportion to the mass of the planet
Yes. Jupiter is mainly made of gas, so any planet slightly smaller in size but made of solid material would have more mass than Jupiter. Bigger size doesn't always mean more mass. For example, a black hole that is several kilometer in diameter can easily be WAY more massive than any planets in our solar system.
Jupiter could potentially orbit a black hole the size of Mars - one that size would have an immense(!) gravitational pull and would be significantly more massive than Jupiter. By comparison, the Sun's Schwarzschild radius is only about 3 km - and Mars has a radius around 3,400 km - so a black hole of that size would be in excess of a thousand times the mass of the Sun.
This is nothing to do with planets. It's part of the theory of black holes. Perhaps you mean if the planet's mass were concentrated into a black hole. In that case the answer is Jupiter, because it has the greatest mass.
A black hole could potentially consume Jupiter if it entered the black hole's event horizon, the point of no return. However, the likelihood of Jupiter encountering a black hole and being sucked up is extremely low due to the vast distances between objects in space.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
There is no black hole on the planet Jupiter, but there is a red spot.
That is the planet Jupiter. The black spot was created recently when a asteroid collided with it. Jupiter has a Great Red Spot created through storms. No planet has a black spot no mars has a giant red spot and mercury has the black spot
Any matter that gets close enough to a black hole can be absorbed by it. But there are no known black holes nearby - the closest known black hole is at a distance of 3000 light-years.
Yes. Jupiter is mainly made of gas, so any planet slightly smaller in size but made of solid material would have more mass than Jupiter. Bigger size doesn't always mean more mass. For example, a black hole that is several kilometer in diameter can easily be WAY more massive than any planets in our solar system.
Earth is the biggest Terrestrial Planet of the SOLAR SYSTEM. Bigger ones are Gas Giants. Bigger than Gas Giants are Stars. Bigger than Stars are Black Holes. The LARGEST TERRESTRIAL PLANET is unknown. It says Largest of THE Terrestrial Planets. The Answer is changing because in seconds, a new planet is formed.
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
Jupiter could potentially orbit a black hole the size of Mars - one that size would have an immense(!) gravitational pull and would be significantly more massive than Jupiter. By comparison, the Sun's Schwarzschild radius is only about 3 km - and Mars has a radius around 3,400 km - so a black hole of that size would be in excess of a thousand times the mass of the Sun.
Jupiter is predominantly a golden color due to its composition of gases, primarily hydrogen and helium. The planet's atmosphere gives it a banded appearance, with distinct layers of different hues, including brown, yellow, and red.
The size of a black dwarf is about the same as some planets. They are expected to range in size from a little less than Earth's diameter to twice Earth's diameter.
A "burn jupiter" occurs when a celestial body, like a star or planet, is engulfed by a larger body, such as a star or black hole, causing it to be destroyed or consumed by the intense heat and gravitational forces.
When light of all colors (wavelengths) is absorbed by an object, the object appears black.
This is nothing to do with planets. It's part of the theory of black holes. Perhaps you mean if the planet's mass were concentrated into a black hole. In that case the answer is Jupiter, because it has the greatest mass.