The Sun will never turn into a black hole. Believe it, or not, our local star (named 'Sol') is only a medium-sized star. It's far too small to ever become a black hole. A very long time from now (billions of years), it will shed most of its mass in a supernova that will create a planetary nebula. What remains will be a super-dense mass of degenerate matter called a White Dwarf.
As for the importance of a star turning into a black hole, it greatly depends on what you consider important. It is important to physicists because it represents a particular set of solutions to a series of equations that, if they were wrong, would mean we had to seriously reconsider Einstein's General Theory of Relativity. This isn't a bad thing, mind you. Scientists actually like having to reconsider theories; it gives them the opportunity to find better theories that may, in turn, offer new and interesting possibilities.
Neither. Our Sun will turn into a red giant, and then cool to become a white dwarf.
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.
No
Firstly our sun is too small to become a black hole. Only stars that are a million to a billion times our sun do this, because they burn through their fuel quickly, unlike our sun. A typical black hole has 3 times the mass of our sun
Soundgarden.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The Sun probably won't turn into a black hole. What determines whether a certain star becomes a black hole is basically the amount of mass left over, once the star runs out of energy. Less massive stars turn into white dwarves; more massive stars into neutron stars; and the most massive of all, into black holes.
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
The Sun doesn't have enough mass, and therefore, not enough gravity, for this to happen.
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.
Black Hole Sun was created in 1994-05.
Neither. Our Sun will turn into a red giant, and then cool to become a white dwarf.
It is unlikely, because the Sun doesn't have enough mass for that to happen.
[THEORY] Scientist believe that the sun will stop burning and turn into a black hole in 5 billion years.