Editing 2844: Black Holes vs Regular Holes

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| Definitely fatal
 
| Definitely fatal
 
| Sometimes fatal
 
| Sometimes fatal
| Falling into a black hole is almost always fatal, because of the shearing effect created by tidal forces and/or radiation from its {{w|accretion disk}}. If the black hole was extremely massive (on the order of many galaxies' worth of mass) and had a very large event horizon, the tidal forces at its event horizon would not be very strong, nor would there be a noticeable accretion disk (what you experience ''beyond'' that point is subject to serious conjecture). On the other hand, only if a regular hole is deep enough (or someone falls incorrectly), is it possible for someone to die by falling into it.
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| Falling into a black hole is almost always fatal, because of the shearing effect created by tidal forces, the intense gravity and/or radiation from its {{w|accretion disk}}. If the black hole was extremely massive (on the order of many galaxies' worth of mass) and had a very large event horizon, the tidal forces at its event horizon would not be very strong, nor would there be a noticeable accretion disk, though the gravity would still be enough to turn anything falling into it into a "spaghetti". On the other hand, only if a regular hole is deep enough (or someone falls incorrectly), is it possible for someone to die by falling into it.
 
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! scope="row" | Created by the Big Bang
 
! scope="row" | Created by the Big Bang
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| Yes
 
| Yes
 
| No
 
| No
| If a star is large enough, when the star dies, it may still have enough gravity to collapse back into itself, thus creating a black hole. Additionally, any star passing in range of a black hole, such as those near the supermassive black hole in the center of the galaxy, may also fall into it, where it would have collided with the 'original' massive star. Other things may collapse into regular holes in a different sense - for example, a house may collapse into a sink hole. However, most regular holes are not large enough for a star to collapse into in this way (unless one considers the near vacuum of space itself to be a 'hole').
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| If a star is large enough, when the star dies, it may still have enough gravity to collapse back into itself, thus creating a black hole. Additionally, any star in range of a black hole, such as those near the supermassive black hole in the center of the galaxy, may also fall into it. Other things may collapse into regular holes in a different sense - for example, a house may collapse into a sink hole. However, most regular holes are not large enough for a star to collapse into in this way (unless one considers the near vacuum of space itself to be a 'hole').
 
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! scope="row" | Explored by humans in famous sci-fi stories
 
! scope="row" | Explored by humans in famous sci-fi stories

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