I assume you mean our sun so that would be the center of our galaxy, approximately 50,000 - 55,000 light years.
Firstly our sun is too small to become a black hole. Only stars that are a million to a billion times our sun do this, because they burn through their fuel quickly, unlike our sun. A typical black hole has 3 times the mass of our sun
The distance between Neptune and a black hole can vary widely depending on the location of the black hole. Black holes are found throughout the universe, so there isn't a fixed distance between Neptune and all black holes. Neptune is currently about 2.7 billion miles from the closest known black hole, which is the stellar-mass black hole in the system HR 6819.
No
It depends on how big the black hole is. If the black hole is small enough it will evaporate into nothingness before it could have any effect on the Sun. However if the black hole didn't evaporate, and if it fell into the Sun, the entire Sun would gradually fall into the black hole.
If the black hole has the same mass as the sun, and if an object is located at an identical distance from it, the force of gravity acting on that object will be the same. The surface gravityof a black hole, however, is a lot stronger than that of a normal star (including our sun), simply because all of it's mass has been compressed into an infinity small point.
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
In that case, the black hole's gravitational pull on Earth will be less than the Sun's gravitational pull - you can do the calculations. However, such a black hole might very well disrupt the orbit of some of the planets.
Black Hole Sun was created in 1994-05.
No. Assuming the sun's mass were compressed into a black hole, the sun would still have the same mass. The gravitational pull created by that mass would not be affected beyond the distance of the sun's present surface area.
The sun's energy has not formed a black hole.
In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
No, the sun is not orbiting a black hole. The sun is part of the Milky Way galaxy and orbits around the center of the galaxy, where there is a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A.
First of all, our sun can not become a black hole, it is too small for that. However if a star is three times bigger than our sun, then yes it will become a black hole.
Firstly our sun is too small to become a black hole. Only stars that are a million to a billion times our sun do this, because they burn through their fuel quickly, unlike our sun. A typical black hole has 3 times the mass of our sun
The distance between Neptune and a black hole can vary widely depending on the location of the black hole. Black holes are found throughout the universe, so there isn't a fixed distance between Neptune and all black holes. Neptune is currently about 2.7 billion miles from the closest known black hole, which is the stellar-mass black hole in the system HR 6819.
1,600 light years. There is 5,865,696,000,000 miles in one light year so do the math.
No, the sun does not orbit a black hole in the center of our galaxy. The sun orbits around the center of the Milky Way galaxy, where there is a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A.