What in the black hole makes it so strong?
Very massive stars, more than ten times the mass of our sun, can turn into a black hole when they die. When this happens the core of the star collapses into a dense ball of neutrons which is unable to resist it’s own gravity, causing it to crush all of it’s matter and mass to a single point, the singularity. When this occurs the matter is destroyed, however the mass is preserved, causing the entire mass of a star to exist at a single point. Normally, the strength gravity is limited by an object’s surface. Meaning you feel the most gravity from an object at it’s surface, well away from the center of mass. In the case of black holes, there is no surface, meaning gravity becomes increasingly powerful as you approach the singularity. Eventually becomes so powerful that the effects of gravity warp space time around the singularity so much that no matter can leave the effects of the gravity well, including light. So long as you don’t cross the event horizon (the point where warped space time