Wiki User
∙ 9y agoIt is not known whether there actually are white holes, or whether they might exist - and if they do, exactly what properties they would have. White holes are a possible solution to the equations of Relativity, but that doesn't mean they actually exist. The problem is that they are in a way the reverse of a black hole - nothing can get OUT OF a black hole, and nothing can get INTO white hole. As a result, it seems to be impossible to destroy a black hole... But similarly, it would also be impossible to create a while hole.
Wiki User
∙ 9y agoAnything that gets close enough.
there's no such thing inside a blackhole
Yes, Einstein's equation E=mc^2 applies to black holes as well. In the context of black holes, mass is converted to energy as matter falls into the black hole. This energy can be observed in the form of radiation emitted by the black hole, known as Hawking radiation.
There are no "black stars" in space. There are black holes, but they don't really "mean" anything, they're just a thing that theory predicts can happen and observation suggests does seem to actually exist.
Black holes do not explode in the traditional sense. However, some black holes can emit powerful jets of energy and matter due to magnetic fields and intense gravitational forces. These jets are produced from material falling into the black hole and are not an explosion in the typical sense.
What happens when a car collides with a beer can? Answer - the same thing.
no. there are no black holes in our solar system.
He did no such thing.
Black holes don't absorb, also we have no idea what happens in a black hole, its the most powerful thing that could ever happen to anything. Our theory is the every this is compacted to the size of an atom.
No where. Black holes eat up every thing around it, including light. It just become part of the black hole. Hope this helped, WoodWorkingMaster
Black Holes
Anything that gets close enough.
there's no such thing inside a blackhole
The only thing that is "most powerful" about them is their gravitational attraction, when you get very close to them.
While scientists have never actually SEEN a black hole (they are called "black holes" because their gravity is so great that not even light can escape!) we believe that super-massive black holes are at the hearts of most galaxies. These super-massive black holes might be the mass of a million stars the size of the Sun, or larger.
Astronomers believe that there are black holes, but I will add that they have only been observed indirectly at great distances, so it may be that the interpretation of our observations will change in the future.
No. There is no such thing as "negative matter." There is a such thing as anti matter, but it still has positive mass.