It is thought that at the very center of a black hole is a quantum singularity.
They are called Black Holes or singularities.
Black holes do exist. They are giant singularities (infinitely small compressed matter) that such pretty much everything in. They have been proven to exist and they are a very talked about subject in the field of astrophysics.
Black holes are located throughout the universe, often at the centers of galaxies. They can also be found in binary systems with other stars. Some black holes are remnants of massive stars that have collapsed, while others are supermassive black holes at the center of galaxies like our own Milky Way.
No, Black Holes are not located in Earth's thermosphere. Black Holes are massive cosmic entities found in space, whereas the thermosphere is a layer of Earth's atmosphere.
By "within" a black hole, I would imagine you mean within the event horizon. Such an object won't ORBIT the black hole - it will simply fall towards the singularity.
The event horizon is the "point of no return" - nothing inside that can escape. In the simplest case (of a non-rotating black hole), this is a sphere, at a certain distance from the black hole's center. The size of the black hole is often taken to be the size of the event horizon.
There are no black holes within our own solar system. There are, however, black holes located within our own galaxy.
They are called Black Holes or singularities.
There are no black holes on the sun. Are you thinking of sunspots?
A singularity is a situation in which a certain mass (usually a large mass) is concentrated in ZERO volume, resulting in an infinite density. This can happen, in certain theories, for black holes, and as the initial conditions of the Big Bang. Physicists generally believe that such singularities don't really exist, and that, if singularities to appear in some formula, they represent a failure of the corresponding theory at extreme conditions.
Black Holes can destroy anything in their path. Only when the 'Hypergiant' is within range of the Black Hole.
Some scientists theorize that black holes may contain singularities, regions where gravitational forces compress matter to infinite density, leading to a breakdown of known physics. Others propose the existence of exotic states of matter or even alternate dimensions within black holes. Additionally, concepts like "firewalls" suggest that the event horizon may not be as straightforward as previously thought, potentially altering our understanding of information preservation. Overall, the nature of black holes remains one of the most intriguing puzzles in modern astrophysics.
Black holes do exist. They are giant singularities (infinitely small compressed matter) that such pretty much everything in. They have been proven to exist and they are a very talked about subject in the field of astrophysics.
There are already black holes within the universe
It isn't known whether micro black holes - usually called primordial black holes - exist at all. If they do exist, they can be at any random location of space.
Most likely not. The best evidence of the existence of black holes has been found deep within galaxies.
The event horizon of a black hole is a spherical area round the center of the black hole; it has a radius proportional to the mass of the black hole - a radius of about 2.95 kilometers for every solar mass.