No - Definition for an atmosphere is a layer of gases that may surround a material body of sufficient mass, and that is held in place by the gravity of the body.
Note: While there have been some papers written on the notion of black hole atmosphere, their employment differs widely. Rather the concept of gravitationally held matter for black holes is better represented as the ergosphere of a black hole.
A black hole is a collapsed supermassive star that's gravity is too great so it becomes unstable and collapses. From this collapse, a black hole is created which can suck in matter and light alike due to its massive gravity, so to answer your question, no.
As you approach a black hole, the gravitational pull becomes incredibly strong, causing immense compression of the surrounding atmosphere. This increase in pressure would lead to extreme heating and chaos in the surrounding environment, potentially causing the atmosphere to be stripped away or undergo significant changes before reaching the black hole's event horizon.
Black holes have no atmosphere, they are entirely empty except for a singularity at the very center containing the entire mass of the black hole in one infinitesimally small point (or if the black hole is spinning, one circular spinning ring of infinitesimally small thickness).
The tornado is a weather phenomenon associated with moving air. It will be confined to a planet with atmosphere. The black hole is a point of massive gravity in space. The two are very different indeed.
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.
There is no atmosphere. Anything near the black hole is busy being pressed into a single lumpy paste to be compressed to the hardest coldest it can be. The materials above a black hole depend on nearby materials: what stars or comets or asteroids are there to feed it. Think of a car crusher: the crusher turns a 10' car into a 3' block. Well a black hole has lots of crushers - each one takes the last one's material and crushed it further. 10' to 9', to 8' to 7'...... to 0.25 inch to 0.125 inch to 0.0625 inch to 0.03125 inch to 0.01512 inch to 0.0075 inch to .... Any atmosphere it might ever have is pulled in immediately.
A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.
A black hole originated as a star, that is, the star converted to a black hole.
A black hole does not have a specific pressure in atmospheres (ATMs) as it is a region of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing can escape, not even light. The pressure within a black hole is thought to be incredibly high, possibly approaching infinite density at its center.
If you fall into a black hole, you'll go into the black hole and nowhere else.
probs black hole
In a black hole, gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. This means that whatever goes into a black hole is trapped inside forever, making the saying "what happens in a black hole stays in a black hole" true.