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The writings of Stephen Hawking should answer most of your questions about black holes. Show people that you have learned from previous questions that you have asked about black holes by including information in the question details, or why it is relevant.

Try choosing a best answer yourself, instead of leaving it to a vote. This will mean actually reading the answers given. You can learn a thing or two.

2006-11-16 17:10:35 · answer #1 · answered by Search first before you ask it 7 · 0 0

This is fairly straight forward. The star came, and went, first and then the black hole. Although not all stars will turn into black holes. The star has to be a certain kind and meet certain criteria when it dies. Our Sun will not turn into a black hole, it is too small and not massive enough. Many speculate that there is a super-massive black hole in the middle of the Milky Way galaxy.

2006-11-14 15:06:07 · answer #2 · answered by gleemonex69 3 · 1 0

Stars exist first. Although, there is so much speculation behind Black Holes its hard to say how or if they even exist. The most popular theory is that a star dies and creates a black hole. Not all stars will create a black hole but that is the basic theory.

2006-11-14 15:01:42 · answer #3 · answered by Drew P 4 · 1 0

When certain types of stars collapse, the result it a black hole. Thus, the star comes first. Black holes do not form stars.

2006-11-14 14:57:57 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The star comes first. As long as a star burns, the energy it puts off counters its gravity, and it's stable. When it stops burning, it's no longer pushing out, but gravity is still pulling in, so it collapses. Some stars eventually stabilize again, much smaller, but some are so massive that they collapse down to an infinitesimal size, and that's a black hole.

2006-11-14 14:56:48 · answer #5 · answered by Amy F 5 · 1 0

the first stars to form after the bigbang were massive stars, many times the size of the sun. they spent short lives quickly burning up there cores which with extreme pressures great the the core of our sun, quickly made heavier elements when the sun fused 2 atoms to make iron the reaction QUICKLY stoped and the sun soon went super or even Hyper-nova. the super-dence reminant of the core was made entirly of nuetrons. this super heavy nuetrom star soon colapsed under its own weight, no longer capable of holding together from the atomic forces keeping the nuetrons apart the star colasped to form a singularity, also known as a black-hole

SUPER MASSIVE BLACK HOLES that excist in the center of large galaxies like our milky way were form by small black holes coming together

2006-11-14 15:01:05 · answer #6 · answered by darkpheonix262 4 · 1 0

star..when the star "dies" it turns into a black hole..

2006-11-14 14:55:32 · answer #7 · answered by yourmygoodfeeling 3 · 1 0

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