There is no known non-fictional stage after the formation of a black hole (in our traditional fourth dimensional SpaceTime continuum). A black hole is conjectured to evaporate without transforming into an other astronomical phenomenon.
Note: While the speed of such evaporation is still very theoretical, the final stage of the evaporation for a black hole has been described to proceed so rapidly that it would end in a tremendous explosion. How powerful this explosion would be depends on how many different species of elementary particles there are. If, as is now widely believed, all particles are made up of perhaps six different kinds of quarks, the final explosion would have an energy equivalent to about 10 million one-megaton hydrogen bombs.
An alternative theory of elementary particles put forward by R. Hagedorn of the European Organization for Nuclear Research argues that there is an infinite number of elementary particles of higher and higher mass. As a black hole got smaller and hotter, it would emit a larger and larger number of different species of particles and would produce an explosion perhaps 100,000 times more powerful than the one calculated on the quark hypothesis. Hence the observation of a blackhole explosion would provide very important information on elementary particle physics, information that might not be available any other way.
Basically there is no "next stage". Well, it is believed that a black hole will evaporate, but that will take a long, long time.
A star after its death becomes a black hole. It is found that a star of any mass,at the stage of its death becomes a Supernova, or it may turn out to be a white dwarf or a neutron star, after its final stage the compression of gasses present in them and due to the very high temperature,they become a black hole. Hence a medium star cannot turn to be a black hole. Hope you to be satisfied with my answer. ty.... :-)
The death stage. It explodes and either collapses into a neutron star or collapses even more into a black hole in space.
Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.
A black hole is a region of space in which gravitation is so strong that not even light can escape found at the centers of galaxies and also as the final stage after the death of very massive stars.
Basically there is no "next stage". Well, it is believed that a black hole will evaporate, but that will take a long, long time.
Yes black hole is last stage of a star
similarly black hole is the last stage of star....
For a star like ours, the black dwarf stage For an immensely massive star, a back hole.
Yes. Intermediate-mass blackhole is a medium size black hole. Scientists have found stellar black holes and supermassive black holes but there is no prove that Intermediate-mass black type of black holes exist. My opinion is that they do exist because when a black hole is becoming a black hole supermassiveblack hole it will need to go though this stage of intermediate-mass black hole.
Neutron star -- then black hole
Many theories have come into existence. The recent one is the hyperspace which states that our universe is like a 3D event horizon of a 4D black hole. So the 3D black holes in our universe there are 2D event horizons consisting of 2D universes. Now a black hole is a hole in the fabric of space-time. So actually it is the last stage itself. Its like the hole in a bathtub or the sink from where all the contents escape to somewhere else.
Not really, but in a Galaxy next to the milky way there is alot of activity and possibly a black hole.
We believe that the nearest black hole is V616 Monocerotis, which is about 3500 light years away.
For a star like ours, the black dwarf stage For an immensely massive star, a back hole.
Most likely not. The chances of our solar system encountering a black hole even in the next few billion years is quite small.If there were a black hole on its way, though, we would not know about it.
A star after its death becomes a black hole. It is found that a star of any mass,at the stage of its death becomes a Supernova, or it may turn out to be a white dwarf or a neutron star, after its final stage the compression of gasses present in them and due to the very high temperature,they become a black hole. Hence a medium star cannot turn to be a black hole. Hope you to be satisfied with my answer. ty.... :-)