No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
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No, the sun is not orbiting a black hole. The sun is part of the Milky Way galaxy and orbits around the center of the galaxy, where there is a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A.
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First of all, our sun can not become a black hole, it is too small for that. However if a star is three times bigger than our sun, then yes it will become a black hole.
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If the Sun were to collapse into a black hole, it would not grow significantly in size. The size of a black hole is determined by its mass, not its previous size as a star. The Sun would become a black hole with a radius of about 3 kilometers.
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No, the sun does not orbit a black hole in the center of our galaxy. The sun orbits around the center of the Milky Way galaxy, where there is a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A.
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Yes, The sun and the solar system orbit the center of the galaxy where there is a black hole.
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If the Sun collapsed into a black hole, it would be about 3 kilometers in diameter.
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No. The sun does not have enough mass to become a black hole. When the sun dies it will become a white dwarf.
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No, the sun does not have enough mass to form a black hole. Even if it did, the sun's gravitational pull would not be strong enough to drag Earth into another galaxy. The sun will eventually evolve into a red giant and then a white dwarf, but it will not become a black hole.
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No te sun is to small to create a black hole when it dies
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Yes, a black hole can consume a sun. If a star collapses into a black hole, the intense gravitational pull can start consuming surrounding matter, including other stars and planets. The black hole's event horizon can engulf a sun and pull it into its gravitational influence.
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The sun should not become a black hole. It does not have sufficient mass to undergo the necessary collapse.
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A black hole can have anywhere from 2-3 times the mass of the Sun (the lower limit for a stellar black hole), to about 20 billion times the mass of the Sun (the largest known supermassive black holes).
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The sun cannot become a black hole. For a star to form a black hole it must be at least 25 times the mass of the sun. When a star like this runs out of fuel in its core, the core collapses and becomes a a black hole while the outer layers are blasted away in a supernova.
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If it gets close enough to the Sun, a black hole would swallow up most of the Sun - becoming a larger (more massive) black hole. A small part of the Sun's matter, i.e., part of its gases, would probably escape into space.
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Our Sun is not nearly massive enough to become a black hole, or even a neutron star. Our Sun will end its life as a white dwarf.
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"Black Hole Sun" is a song by the band Soundgarden, with vocals performed by the band's lead singer, Chris Cornell.
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No, the sun is too small.
For a star to turn into a black hole, the star needs to measure 25 or more solar masses. The sun weighs in at 1 solar mass. Therefore, a star needs to be 25 times the mass of the sun to turn into a black hole.
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A black hole will "such things up" if such things get sufficiently close to the black hole. This is a result of its gravity. Similarly, our Sun will "suck things up" if they get too close - for example, a comet might crash onto the Sun; the comet's mass will increase the mass of the Sun.
Please note that if, for example, our Sun becomes a black hole (it probably won't, since it doesn't have enough mass for that), without changing its mass in the process, the Earth will continue orbiting the black hole as it orbited the Sun before. It will NOT be "sucked up" in the process - the black hole's gravitational attraction would be the same as the Sun's attraction before becoming a black hole.
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No. The Sun is a star - as you can see if you look out of the window.
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No. Our Sun isn't massive enough to go supernova, or to turn into a black hole. A star needs to be more than 3 times more massive than our Sun in order to become a black hole.
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The black hole will get more massive. Some energy will be radiated away.
If you'd like more details, please rephrase your question in a more specific fashion. The Sun is in no danger of encountering a black hole in the foreseeable future, so there's no real rush.
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It will fall into the black hole. The same happens if something gets too close the Sun, for example - it will fall into the Sun.
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Basically, the same thing can happen as if something gets too close to the Sun, or to a planet: it can fall into the black hole (or Sun, or planet).
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When the sun gets way to hot that it collappses into a black hole
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Simply put, it isn't big enough. A star must have a certain mass to become a black hole after its "death", and the Sun doesn't have enough.
Our "Sun" is not big enough, only stars that are a lot bigger will explode and become a black hole.
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A black hole needs to be a minimum of about 3 or 4 solar masses.
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Black holes can be many different sizes. Therefore, there are some black holes that are bigger than the sun, and there are some that are smaller than the sun.
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It probably won't ever become a black hole, unless for some reason a lot of additional matter falls on the Sun. Stars the mass of our Sun become white dwarves after they run out of fuel.
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It cannot. The sun does not have enough mass to form a black hole. When it runs out of fuel an dies it will form a dense remnant called a white dwarf. Only stars 25 times the mass of the sun or more have strong enough gravity for their cores to collapse all the way to a black hole.
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It takes a dying star 20 times the size of our sun to create a black hole. So no they can't.
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In that case, the black hole's gravitational pull on Earth will be less than the Sun's gravitational pull - you can do the calculations. However, such a black hole might very well disrupt the orbit of some of the planets.
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there is nothing inside a black hole...a black hole's density is very large...so large all of our planets and stars including the sun's density would not even be 0.1% that of a black hole...a black hole is so strong, not even light can escape it...nothing can.
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The black hole with a mass of 3 solar masses has the largest radius among the objects listed. This is because the radius of a black hole is determined by its mass and the Schwarzschild radius formula, which dictates that the radius of a black hole increases with its mass.
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A black hole can have anywhere between a few Sun masses, and several billion Sun masses (the so-called "supermassive black holes"). The diameter of the event horizon, if that's what you mean, is directly proportional to the black hole's mass - in other words, more massive black holes have a larger diameter.
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No. There are not black holes anywhere near our solar system. Even then, scientific models suggest that stellar-mass black holes, the smallest common type, must be at least 3 times more massive than the sun, so the sun would more likely orbit the black hole if one were nearby.
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For the sun to become a black hole, it would need to be compressed to a size of about 2.95 kilometers (1.83 miles) in radius. This is called the Schwarzschild radius, which is the point at which the gravitational pull becomes strong enough to form a black hole.
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