sew it back up
If a space shuttle were to approach a black hole, the extreme gravitational pull would likely cause it to be stretched and ripped apart by tidal forces, a process known as spaghettification. As it enters the event horizon, it would be unable to escape and would inevitably be consumed by the black hole, with all information contained within the shuttle lost to the singularity.
The term black hole is a misnomer that implies the notion of a hole; there is no hole, so there is no hole foe light to escape into another multidimensional place. A black hole is a spherical volume of immense gravitational attraction. The interface presented towards the outside world, called the event horizon is not really a physical boundary: it's merely the point beyond which not even light can hope to escape the gravitational pull of the black hole.
No. The gravitational forces are so great that your body would be ripped apart long before you actually entered the black hole.
i believe it is destroyed in a way that it cannot be altered back to its original form, like say if you have an object that gets sucked into a black hole, you would first have to take into account that the hole 'absorbs' light and it cannot run away. secondly the mass of the black hole can be infinity massive. your object would be deformed, if you will in such a way that space will be crumpled ( im English sorry ). basically the matter of the object will implode and explode thus meaning that due to the gravitational circumstanced the object will be destroyed in a way that cannot be imagined. as of time and space and light being destroyed by the hole it would mean that neither exist in the black hole, meaning that the object you put in the black hole may have an infinite mass or a minus infinite mass. regarding time the object could be ripped to shreds in miliseconds or slowly - yet the miliseconds sounds more appropriate. sorry if you don't understand - im only 13 ;(
As the Earth approaches the event horizon of a massive black hole, tidal forces would become so strong that it would be stretched and ripped apart. The intense gravitational pull would cause the planet to disintegrate into a stream of particles before eventually being pulled into the black hole beyond the event horizon.
No - should you fall into a black hole (which is very unlikely to happen), you would get ripped apart.
If a space shuttle were to approach a black hole, the extreme gravitational pull would likely cause it to be stretched and ripped apart by tidal forces, a process known as spaghettification. As it enters the event horizon, it would be unable to escape and would inevitably be consumed by the black hole, with all information contained within the shuttle lost to the singularity.
The term black hole is a misnomer that implies the notion of a hole; there is no hole, so there is no hole foe light to escape into another multidimensional place. A black hole is a spherical volume of immense gravitational attraction. The interface presented towards the outside world, called the event horizon is not really a physical boundary: it's merely the point beyond which not even light can hope to escape the gravitational pull of the black hole.
It hit a glacier that ripped a huge hole in it and it sunk.
If you pass the event horizon of a black hole, you will most assuredly die. You would either suffocate from a lack of oxygen, be ripped apart by the centrifugal force, you you would be crushed into an infintely small space by the immense gravity.
A Hole in Space was created in 1974.
No, a black hole is not actually a hole in space. It is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it.
A Hole in Space has 196 pages.
well if our earth fell into the black hole it get ripped apart before reaching the singularity
Yes. It was called Holly. It was vey stupid and some say it thought the moon was cheese and tried to eat the moon through its space suit. Sadly, it ripped a hole in its suit and died within 15 seconds.
You wont, you will basically be ripped apart once in contact with one
Not pulled apart but RIPPED apart to shred's.