It would emit a lot of radiation. Some distant black holes (or more accurately, the area around the black holes) emit more radiation than an entire galaxy. Such black holes are known as quasars.
Our Milky Way has a supermassive black hole at its nucleus. It is an active radio source. It is probably not a Seyfert galaxy, which is a galaxy of a type characterized by a bright compact core that shows strong infrared emission, though.
The milky way contains about a dozen black holes in the milky way.
They don't specifically orbit the black hole. Stars orbit the Milky Way because in general, they are attracted to the other masses in the Milky Way. The supermassive black hole is only a tiny fraction of the total mass of the Milky Way. Well, you might say that they move around the black hole, but that's only because it happens to be there. Without they black hole, they would move around the center of the Milky Way anyway.
The Milky Way appears to have a huge (even for a black hole) gravitational object at the center of it, and this is supposed by a lot of scientists to be a black hole. The arms of our galaxy sweep around the center.
If the Milky Way were a quasar, it would be incredibly bright and emit vast amounts of energy due to the supermassive black hole at its center consuming huge amounts of matter. The high energy output would impact the surrounding galaxies and alter the dynamics of the entire universe.
Our Milky Way has a supermassive black hole at its nucleus. It is an active radio source. It is probably not a Seyfert galaxy, which is a galaxy of a type characterized by a bright compact core that shows strong infrared emission, though.
The milky way contains about a dozen black holes in the milky way.
The Milky Way is considered a normal galaxy, classified as a barred spiral galaxy. While it does have some active regions, such as star-forming areas and a supermassive black hole at its center, these features are typical for galaxies of its type. Unlike active galaxies, which exhibit extreme luminosity and energetic phenomena, the Milky Way's activity level is relatively moderate. Overall, it fits the characteristics of a typical galaxy in the universe.
It seems unlikely that this will occur before our Milky Way galaxy collides with Andromeda. Our solar system seems to be safely in orbit around the supermassive black hole in the center of the Milky Way, but in 4 billion years, when Andromeda (with its OWN supermassive black hole) collides with the Milky Way, it might possibly happen.
The Sun is already in the Milky Way
Mighty Milky Way happened in 2011.
in space
Black holes are common in most galaxies. It is not odd that there would be a black hole in the middle of the Milky Way.
Tantei Opera Milky Holmes happened in 2012.
No - The volume of the Milky Way galaxy is larger than the volume of its host black hole. The accumulated mass of the Milky Way galaxy is greater than the mass of its host black hole. The density of the Milky Way galaxy is much smaller than the density of its host black hole.
The middle of the milky way is a black hole and a black hole cannot be made up as matter. The middle of the milky way has no size, but the black hole sucks the light making it look big in pictures. The actual size is nothing.
Fortunately, no.