well you think about it is is 11,000 because outer space is very alot of money
A black hole can have either positive, negative, or neutral charge. The charge of a black hole can be acquired through the consumption of charged particles, but the overall effect of the charge on the black hole's properties is not significant compared to its mass.
There is no black hole in the Pacific Ocean. Black holes are astronomical phenomena that occur in outer space and cannot form within Earth's oceans.
Not directly. If large amounts of matter is falling into the black hole it will heat up and glow brightly. You could also potentially see the distortion of light around the black hole, but you'd have to get pretty close to see that.
The size of a black hole, as defined by the size of the event horizon, depends on the mass of the black hole and its electrical charge. The diameter of the event horizon is directly proportional to the black hole's mass. Adding electrical charge decreases the size of the event horizon.
The answer is, you cannot see photos of a black hole. You are quite right; not even light can escape a black hole's incredible gravity, so all black holes are completely invisible. It is possible, however, to see long trails of matter that is being pulled into a black hole. The way we detect black holes from earth, however, is by picking up the gamma rays that they emit.
the black hole is a matter in outer space that is made by the force of gravity
Big dipper is an outer space word. Black hole is another outer space word that begins with the letter b.
the answer is a black hole
Black holes are in outer space, far outside our solar system. Most galaxies have a large black hole at the center.
Three key characteristics of a black hole are its mass, charge, and spin. The mass determines the gravitational pull of the black hole, affecting how it interacts with surrounding matter. Charge refers to the electric charge of the black hole, which can influence its electromagnetic interactions. Spin describes the rotation of the black hole, affecting the space-time geometry around it and leading to phenomena like frame-dragging.
well if you mean a black hole on earth then theres not really a good chance but if you mean in outer space than one already formed
A black hole can have either positive, negative, or neutral charge. The charge of a black hole can be acquired through the consumption of charged particles, but the overall effect of the charge on the black hole's properties is not significant compared to its mass.
There is no black hole in the Pacific Ocean. Black holes are astronomical phenomena that occur in outer space and cannot form within Earth's oceans.
Black holes actually come in different masses, and therefore sizes.
A black hole is the location of a singularity, it doesn't lead to anywhere. This means that if you fall into a black hole (assuming that you can stay alive) you'll just be stuck inside that hole forever--never able to get out.
Not directly. If large amounts of matter is falling into the black hole it will heat up and glow brightly. You could also potentially see the distortion of light around the black hole, but you'd have to get pretty close to see that.
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.