Sooner or later every star like our own sun starts loosing its energy and starts shrinking. The matter within gets so dense that nothing can escape from the clutches of its gravity, even light. As the garavity increases it starts sucking /eating every thing which comes near it.
This is just a hypothetical thinking. Nothing has been proved by the scientists so far.
2006-09-26 06:15:32
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answer #1
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answered by ♪¢αpη' ε∂ïß♪ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ 6
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No. A black hole is a collapsed star which was so massive that when it collapsed the gravitational forces are so strong that all matter is crushed ( to the point of even the atoms that made up the matter being crushed, and the neutrons and protons in the nucleus being crushed ) to a point which is called a singularity. The mass of the matter that was crushed is still there and its gravitational force still exists and is so stong that even light cannot escape. It cannot suck itself in since it (the star it came from) has already be "sucked in".
2006-09-26 06:08:05
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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A black hole is so small that they are considered to be point gravity sources. They are called singularities since they do not conform to the natural laws we live with.
Chances are good that our universe is a super black hole which nothing can leave.
Since we do have observed the spontaneous appearances of energy and matter, that would have to the equivalent of matter falling into a black hole, which to us seems to come from nowhere.
2006-09-26 06:33:40
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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We do not know everything about black holes and most likely never will. The center of a black hole is unconceivably dense (like paris hilton and jessica simpson) and thus has immense gravity. . . gravity so immense that even light can not escape it. . . it is possible that when this gravity becomes too dense and the matter amount so large. . . a big bang type expolosion may occur. We do not yet know at this time.
2006-09-26 06:05:11
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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It is likely that the black hole cannot suck itself in, as you put it, as a result of the Pauli Exclusion principle. Which basically means that no 2 things that are the same, in terms of things such as type of particle and spin amongst others, may occupy the same space. The repulsive force this provides is immensely more powerful than gravity.
Also black holes can merge. It is believed that there is a giant black hole at the centre of our galaxy as a result of this merging of multiple black holes.
2006-09-27 18:17:13
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answer #5
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answered by propheticwalnut 3
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A black hollow can not suck itself up. A black hollow is only a area of area defined through an "experience horizon." This experience horizon is basically a boundary between the area of area the position mild can get away, and the area the position mild can not get away. something that crosses the progression horizon is unable to flee. (Hawking Radiation is a quantum effect, btw, which would not get away THE BLACK hollow - 0.5 of it enters the different 0.5 would not get sucked in - Stephen Hawking explains it nicely) A black hollow is somewhat no longer something particular. it really is only a collapsed superstar (i.e. you should imagine of it like some lump of mass) it really is so as that enormous that it ought to end mild escaping. So, you spot, a black hollow isn't an merchandise, it really is a area of area- it ought to't suck itself up because there is no longer something for itself to suck up - it really is only a area OF area FROM WHICH mild can not get away So what's it like interior a black hollow? maximum folk say "A singularity" yet what's a singularity? a aspect the position the guidelines of physics wreck down? no one is common with, and no one will likely ever understand because no longer something escapes the black hollow that ought to let us know about what's interior. till i'm getting my gravity wave detector operating of route...
2016-11-24 20:26:20
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answer #6
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answered by vaibhav 4
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It only appears to be a Black Hole because the gravity won't let the light out to us.
The greater the gravity the larger appears the Black Hole.
The centre is called singularity, no time or space.
Energy is spat out side ways to manufacture more stars later.
2006-09-26 06:13:17
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answer #7
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answered by rogerglyn 6
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what makes a black hole black is that what we"see" , the event horizon, this is the area where gravity is so strong that even light cannot escape, so in a sense the black hole has already sucked itself in.(the ultradense matter{yes it is even more dense than paris}that makes up the black hole is already in it.)
2006-09-26 06:18:33
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answer #8
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answered by gabegm1 4
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This is one theory behind the big bang, a large black hole which sucked everything in. It eventually became so dense that it sucked itself in, and then exploded.
Another theory is that this big black hole which exploded once is in fact an oscillating hole, which sucks everything in, explodes, and then starts sucking everything in again.
Everything goes in circles.
2006-09-26 06:33:24
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answer #9
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answered by James 6
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I don't belive a black hole can Consume itself, the reason being that if It could all it would make is a bigger Black hole and if that was the case it would just Loop over and over again and the universe as we know it wouldnt exisit
2006-09-26 06:08:19
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answer #10
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answered by markman 1
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