When objects fall into the Black Hole, the energies and nuclear fields encountered are too strong to maintain the object's identity. It is taken beyond the limits of atomic fusion into the realm of sub atomic energy states.
Some energy and mass escapes the Black Hole and is seen in 'Galactic Jets' and various infrared wave lengths. The remaining energies proceed according to their individual characters. Whatever remains inside the Black Hole is of a character beyond our ability to experience. The fields are beyond our experimental technologies. The concentration of gravity energy overpowers all others.
;-D Entire galaxies are turning around the gravity-well focused on the black hole.
2007-01-29 01:11:13
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answer #1
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answered by China Jon 6
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Well if you accept the standard idea of black holes they collapse to a point, so we can say they become infinitesimally small.
However if gravastars are what blackholes truly are then the size depends on the event horizon since it would be that and not a point in the centre that created the massive gravity.
2007-01-29 01:21:40
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The information contained in matter and energy that falls into a black hole is radiated into higher dimensions.
Perhaps it's just me, but I have a hard time conceptualizing "size" in eleven dimensions.
2007-01-29 00:55:42
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answer #3
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answered by lunatic 7
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Black holes defy the law of physics, in that, the law is energy cannot be destroyed, only transferred. For instance, kinetic to heat to whatever. But black holes swallow energy and mass, and no-one knows what happens to that information.
2007-01-29 00:49:09
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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The size is zero. A singularity. Not just energy, but infinitely dense mass.
2007-01-29 00:58:47
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answer #5
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answered by campbelp2002 7
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They're theorized to be singularities (points with no dimension).
2007-01-29 00:45:00
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answer #6
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answered by Gene 7
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