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.
No. There are no black holes in our solar system. Based on current models, the smallest stellar mass black holes are at the very least about 3 times the mass of the sun. Therefore, if there were a black hole in our solar system the sun would either orbit it or the two would orbit about a common center of mass.
The mass of a black hole can be calculated by observing the movement of any object which is in orbit around it - or simply close enough to be affected by the black hole's gravity. The same method can be used to calculate the mass of other objects - for example, both stars in a binary star system.
What orbit? - As with any mass in the Universe, objects can orbit around a black hole; if there is a black hole nearby, it can pull on an object that is in orbit around another object, chainging the shape of its orbit.
Define a "hyper black hole". A "Hyper Black Hole" is a massive "Black hole" thought to be created by many Black holes merging together. Theological Physics now believe that most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, have a "Hyper Black Hole" in the center
No. There are not black holes anywhere near our solar system. Even then, scientific models suggest that stellar-mass black holes, the smallest common type, must be at least 3 times more massive than the sun, so the sun would more likely orbit the black hole if one were nearby.
Most likely not. The best evidence of the existence of black holes has been found deep within galaxies.
Black holes can't be observed directly. The Hawking Radiation is so weak, that it will perhaps never be observed.Black holes are detected indirectly, basically by their gravitational effects. This includes: * Gravitational lensing of objects behind the black hole * Observing objects that orbit the black hole * The accretion disk of a black hole can become extremely hot, making some black holes the brightest objects in the Universe! All of these are effects that happen OUTSIDE the black hole proper.
No. There are no black holes in our solar system. Based on current models, the smallest stellar mass black holes are at the very least about 3 times the mass of the sun. Therefore, if there were a black hole in our solar system the sun would either orbit it or the two would orbit about a common center of mass.
The Daily Orbit - 2012 The Black Holes of the Ocean 2-19 was released on: USA: 24 September 2013
No. A year is the time it takes for Earth to orbit the sun. Black holes are formed far out in space and are not affected by Earth or its orbit.
because the black holes that they think are at the center of galaxies most likely have rotation, and the stars around it orbit the black hole somewhat like an accretion disc.
The movement of black holes is not fully understood. Whether they transverse the galaxy or are gravitational bound by the surrounding matter is not fully understood. The "media" has reported that they roam the Universe in search of stars and planets to devour but this seems to be "typical" media sensualism However, the supermassive black holes at the centre of most if not all galaxies, are bound within the galaxy. All objects in the Universe, galaxy, solar system, orbit, planet or moon are bound by gravity. The question should be do all stars and galaxies stay in position relative to the black hole. A: Yes.
black holes are invisible because its gravitational pull is so strong even light cant escape from it. so what scientists do is they look at things around the black hole. if there is a black hold near a planet or star that objects orbit will be altered and it will be heating up from the friction of going into the hole.
The mass of a black hole can be calculated by observing the movement of any object which is in orbit around it - or simply close enough to be affected by the black hole's gravity. The same method can be used to calculate the mass of other objects - for example, both stars in a binary star system.
What orbit? - As with any mass in the Universe, objects can orbit around a black hole; if there is a black hole nearby, it can pull on an object that is in orbit around another object, chainging the shape of its orbit.
Define a "hyper black hole". A "Hyper Black Hole" is a massive "Black hole" thought to be created by many Black holes merging together. Theological Physics now believe that most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, have a "Hyper Black Hole" in the center
Yes there are millions of objects that orbit Saturn.