It's lunch.
2006-07-18 09:05:28
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answer #1
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answered by Jeal 2
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Once a giant star dies and a black hole has formed, all its mass is squeezed into a single point. At this point, both space and time stop. It's very hard for us to imagine a place where mass has no volume and time does not pass, but that's what it is like at the center of a black hole.
2006-07-18 09:06:52
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The center of a black hole contains NOTHING. Absolutely nothing. Basically, if you control time with it (which time stops inside the center).
If the planets and suns that have been sucked inside of it, does it grow? If it pulls them in, does it cause the mass to gain, which in turn gains correct? Or maybe it causes it to turn them into nothing at all.
2006-07-18 09:11:45
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answer #3
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answered by WantToGoHome 2
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Elvis
2006-07-18 09:06:42
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answer #4
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answered by atomictulip 5
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A singularity.
Thus, it actually has no center, since no dimensions.
You probably mean at the center of its perception horizon which surrounds it like a sphere, and at the center of that is the singularity.
2006-07-18 09:09:31
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answer #5
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answered by Grey Bear 2
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What's in the middle of ANY hole ?
Just a hole !!
2006-07-18 09:08:03
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answer #6
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answered by Froggy 7
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A lump of mass with the density of thousands of suns taking up about this much space -----> .
2006-07-18 09:06:31
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answer #7
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answered by Blunt Honesty 7
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A male
2006-07-18 19:49:54
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answer #8
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answered by 22 2
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Collapsed star.
2006-07-18 09:06:47
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answer #9
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answered by dullguy2001 4
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A donut
2006-07-18 09:10:45
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answer #10
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answered by Mork the Stork 3
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a purple cow that goes meow
2006-07-18 09:09:58
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answer #11
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answered by PumaPepper 2
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