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I guess another way to phrase it would be: Is Black Hole just a stage that will eventually give way to another stage?

2006-11-11 09:30:10 · 9 answers · asked by rebekkah hot as the sun 7 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

9 answers

Not believed to max out as you say. The diameter of the event horizon will keep expanding as new material is drawn in. Stellar black holes are believed to be only a few miles across, while super-massive black holes comparable to the size of the solar system are believed to exist at the centers of some galaxies.

2006-11-11 09:48:25 · answer #1 · answered by SAN 5 · 3 0

The black hole has a gravity that has reached a mass of infinity . It has gravity that will pull everything in from light years away, a thing of infinite gravity has an actual size . The only place I think u will find a black hole is in the center of a galaxy. U cant see what is going on because of all the garbage that is being sucked in.

2006-11-11 12:39:21 · answer #2 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 0 0

A black hole is nothing more then gravitational farces collapsing on them self's, at the center of a black hole nothing not even light can pass, on top of that you have time dilation and tidal riffs. Put simply once a stare goes super nova or it's gravitational forces are greater then it's own mass it folds in to it's self hins the big boom or flash of light you might see when this happens. It will remain a constant size and will not expand or shrink it just is. I hope this helps.

2006-11-11 13:31:57 · answer #3 · answered by matt v 3 · 0 0

A black hole would eventually accrete all the mater in the universe and sit for eternity looking for something else.
No black holes are theoretical entities that can not exist!!
The universe is a finite entity that will some day cease to exist!

2006-11-12 02:41:13 · answer #4 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

A black hole could swallow the entire universe if it all came together somehow. There are no protons, neutrons or any other particles in a black hole. All matter at the center of a black hole has been crushed to indivisible quarks which are the building blocks of all other matter.

2006-11-11 14:13:11 · answer #5 · answered by Michael da Man 6 · 0 0

Some famous astronomers speculate that over the eons the protons and neutrons in the black hole break, slowly eroding its mass. But if these theories are correct, it would take like 10^100 years for the black hole to disintegrate, far longer than any of us are capable of imagining.

2006-11-11 10:17:51 · answer #6 · answered by betterthanblacks 2 · 2 0

Nope. Some black holes are over three billion times the mass of the sun and still growing. They only stop expanding when they run out of food.

2006-11-11 15:10:06 · answer #7 · answered by Nomadd 7 · 0 0

I did not think black holes expand. It gobbles up everything. But size does not increase. I think astro-physicists believe it reaches zero-size as soon as it becomes a black hole and stays that way (till all matter it has evaporates).

2006-11-11 09:38:23 · answer #8 · answered by ramshi 4 · 1 0

nicely, ..., no that is not it in any respect. 1st you like mass and a ball of concrete even the dimensions of earth would not have sufficient mass for that. Secondly, on your brother's analogy the concrete might nevertheless be concrete. In a black hollow the stuff on the middle is not matter. that is fabric that has been ripped different than for that is parent matter and decreased to it irreducible atomic debris. that is identity (on the middle) is lost. the truthfully identity of the difficulty it as quickly as become is encoded (or so that is theorized) on the accretion disk. so which you spot a black hollow is incredibly plenty greater complicated that matter that is been all "squashed" mutually. See the link under:

2016-11-23 16:07:24 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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