No. ther eis no black hole in our solar system.
Black holes are a byproduct of the death of massive stars at least 10 times the mass of our sun. If there was a black hole between Mars and Jupiter all of the planets and even our Sun would revolve around the black hole. Since this is not the case there is no possible way a black hole could be within the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. There is however a large belt of asteroids between Mars and Jupiter.
No, Jupiter does not have enough mass to become a black hole if it exploded. For a star to turn into a black hole, it needs to have several times the mass of the sun, which Jupiter does not have. Jupiter would likely disperse into a cloud of gas and dust if it exploded.
A black hole could potentially consume Jupiter if it entered the black hole's event horizon, the point of no return. However, the likelihood of Jupiter encountering a black hole and being sucked up is extremely low due to the vast distances between objects in space.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
The mass of the black hole would increase in proportion to the mass of the planet
No. Mars would not exists if it had a stable black hole: it would be 'eaten' almost before we could blink. Black holes are so powerful one of them at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy is what holds our galaxy spinning and together.
No, Jupiter does not have enough mass to become a black hole if it exploded. For a star to turn into a black hole, it needs to have several times the mass of the sun, which Jupiter does not have. Jupiter would likely disperse into a cloud of gas and dust if it exploded.
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
There is no black hole on the planet Jupiter, but there is a red spot.
A black hole could potentially consume Jupiter if it entered the black hole's event horizon, the point of no return. However, the likelihood of Jupiter encountering a black hole and being sucked up is extremely low due to the vast distances between objects in space.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
The mass of the black hole would increase in proportion to the mass of the planet
Any matter that gets close enough to a black hole can be absorbed by it. But there are no known black holes nearby - the closest known black hole is at a distance of 3000 light-years.
It maters what way its going anyway it can suck up Jupiter or even mars and still might not effect earth but i can suck in planets and come for earth.
No. Mars would not exists if it had a stable black hole: it would be 'eaten' almost before we could blink. Black holes are so powerful one of them at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy is what holds our galaxy spinning and together.
The Daily Orbit - 2012 Black Hole Wakes Up and Snacks on a Super-Jupiter 1-151 was released on: USA: 3 April 2013
Planets will never become black holes. They don't even have enough mass to undergo nuclear fusion, let alone form iron cores that are neccecary for supernova. in technicality here, if a planet like the earth were to be compressed down to the size of a tennisball, but retain all of its mass, it too would become a miniture black hole, but only for the time that the machinery that put it in this place were still active upon it. If left alone, a planet-massed black hole would instantaneously expand, losing its blackhole status.
Yes. In fact, if our Sun turned into a black hole, which it can't, but if it did, it's diameter would be approximately 3km (yes 3km) but would still have the same mass. The planets, would still revolve in the same orbit as if nothing had happened - albeit a lot darker and colder. The smallest of Mars moons, Deimos, has a diameter of 12km The Suns diameter is approximately 1.4 million km.