Well assuming you were in a spaceship/spacesuit (otherwise you'd be dead already) you be crushed by the extreme gravitational forces of the black hole.
Or if you watch the Disney version you see pretty lights and stuff.
2007-02-06 06:51:28
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answer #1
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answered by hansh0t1st 3
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A lot of things happen when you fall into a black hole, and most of them depend on whose reference you're talking about. If you are talking about someone from the outside, they will see you slow down asymptotically as you approach the event horizon of the black hole (the point at which light can no longer escape). In fact, to them, you will never actually make it inside.
You, on the other hand, will see things entirely different. Firstly, you will notice that as you get closer and closer, everything around you will appear "pushed" together. The closer you get, all you will be able to see of the outside universe and the ship you might be from will be a ring above your head (assuming you are falling feet-first into the hole) getting progressively smaller and more dense until soon all you can see is a tiny point of light pointing away from the black hole.
You will start to notice that you are being stretched out. However, this depends greatly on the mass of the black hole. In a supermassive black hole, you will feel this to a much lesser extent. Your legs will be pulled almost the same as your upper body. Less massive black holes, however, will tend to do you in much faster. Your legs will be experiencing a much greater pull than your upper body, and you will soon experience "spagettification" as you are torn apart by the tidal forces of the black hole.
This is, of course, purely speculative. We don't know what will actually happen, but this is our best guess.
2007-02-06 07:02:52
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answer #2
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answered by Jonny Jo 3
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You would be torn to pieces before you got near it. Some of the huge potential energy of yours would be turned into radiation like light and x-rays. Black holes aren't black. They are bright because the stuff falling in shines brightly. Once the remaining bits had fallen within the "event horizon" they will never get out again.
2007-02-06 07:39:47
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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i understand you're speaking theoretically, yet an impact with yet another great body able to fixing the earth's orbit and sending it in route of a supermassive black hollow, ought to more effective than likely be adequate to end maximum existence in the international. If someway we were to stay as a lot because the point of turning into trapped interior of a black hollow's gravity field i ought to ought to anticipate that the layers of Earth ought to commence to peel off lengthy in the previous the impact really occurred. for the reason that maximum persons stay on the outer layer we may die from the freezing chilly because the ambience dissipated and all mild should be diverted from the exterior. merely my ideas.
2016-11-02 12:22:23
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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You personally would feel nothing. You would be trapped in an area with almost no space, and no time would exist. To someone watching on the event horizon, it would seem like you were ionized, although you would be spread out in an ultra thin layer of particles across the event horizon
2007-02-06 06:51:33
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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The closest black hole is several light years away. Located in the middle of our Galaxy it supplies the gravity that holds us all in orbit .
2007-02-06 07:37:44
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answer #6
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answered by JOHNNIE B 7
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get sucked in, then die...lol
2007-02-06 08:19:37
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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you would be sucked into another dimension...and die....
2007-02-06 06:51:12
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answer #8
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answered by pinkpup101 3
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