They do not take people to space.
The Hubble Space Telescope takes pictures of various celestial objects in space, including stars, galaxies, nebulae, and planets in our own solar system. It has provided stunning images that have helped astronomers better understand the universe and phenomena like black holes, distant galaxies, and planetary atmospheres.
This question doubtless arises from John Wheeler's statement that "black holes have no hair". All black holes are "hairless"; what is meant by this is that all black holes are completely characterized by exactly 3 things: mass, angular momentum (rotation), and electric charge. All other properites (such as the Schwarzchild radius, etc.), are derived from these three. Two black holes with the same values for these three quantities are entirely indistinguishable. This is more than a simple conjecture or apparent observational fact; it takes the form of a proven theorem in 3+1 dimensional space.
it loses energy due to hawking radiation, and disappears.How does a black hole die*How do black holes die*They don't.. There not living they are a phenomena.. They could however collapse in on upon itself..
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No. An asteroid does not have enough mass. In order to become a black hole an object must be massive enough to be crushed by its won gravity. This takes an object at least several times more massive than the sun.
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.
That is a really good question, but no one actually knows. Though we do know that one day that Black holes will die because it will become smaller and smaller and then ping, it died. However the black holes that were create from the beginning of the Universe are still exist, so it will takes billions and billions and billions and billions of years from black hole to die.
The existence of miniature black holes have not been confirmed yet. It has been hypothesized that there may be some, that formed during the Big Bang. If they did form, we might see flashes from the disintegration of those black holes, now and then. (A miniature black hole takes much less time to disintegrate than a bigger one.)The existence of miniature black holes have not been confirmed yet. It has been hypothesized that there may be some, that formed during the Big Bang. If they did form, we might see flashes from the disintegration of those black holes, now and then. (A miniature black hole takes much less time to disintegrate than a bigger one.)The existence of miniature black holes have not been confirmed yet. It has been hypothesized that there may be some, that formed during the Big Bang. If they did form, we might see flashes from the disintegration of those black holes, now and then. (A miniature black hole takes much less time to disintegrate than a bigger one.)The existence of miniature black holes have not been confirmed yet. It has been hypothesized that there may be some, that formed during the Big Bang. If they did form, we might see flashes from the disintegration of those black holes, now and then. (A miniature black hole takes much less time to disintegrate than a bigger one.)
no it only takes up the space of where the black hole was located
First, black holes are still theory. Second, how would you get to one? Of course they can, but the bigger they are, the slower it takes it to do it. That's why they don't send people to them. It is a scientific theory, nothing has been proven yet.
The Hubble Space Telescope takes pictures of various celestial objects in space, including stars, galaxies, nebulae, and planets in our own solar system. It has provided stunning images that have helped astronomers better understand the universe and phenomena like black holes, distant galaxies, and planetary atmospheres.
Matter - the relationship between the space it takes up and its mass is called density. But it is possible to have something that has enormous mass and takes up no space (it therefore has infinite density). This is called a black hole.
This question doubtless arises from John Wheeler's statement that "black holes have no hair". All black holes are "hairless"; what is meant by this is that all black holes are completely characterized by exactly 3 things: mass, angular momentum (rotation), and electric charge. All other properites (such as the Schwarzchild radius, etc.), are derived from these three. Two black holes with the same values for these three quantities are entirely indistinguishable. This is more than a simple conjecture or apparent observational fact; it takes the form of a proven theorem in 3+1 dimensional space.
they describe it as, something that takes up space
Black people that run fast.
They will eventually evaporate, if that's what you mean. But it takes a long, long time for a typical black hole to evaporate - much longer than the current age of the Universe.
twice as long as it takes to dig two holes