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What new info do you bring to this subject?
What else are you gone explain it with? Dark magic?
Not really. Current science implies a black hole singularity with infinite density, which breaks the modern laws of physics. Certain parts of black hole formation are understood, but our overall scientific understanding could be wildly incomplete.
No no no and no, this is not how it work.
To make it very quickly,
1 you need a massive star not just any star.
2 the star will star the fusion of the hydrogen and then everything up to iron, when the star will try the fusion the iron (that fusion require more energy than the fusion is providing) it's a disaster, gravity win and the layers of the star are falling on the core, crushing it to make a neutron star out of it or a black hole for a real mammouth like star.
The layers will bounce on the core and expand all around the star in a HUGE "explosion" during this process everything above iron is created.
sorry this is very simple but my english is not good enough to give you more details.
Next candidat could be Betelgeuse in Orion, one of my favorite star.
A neutron star will act like a black hole, it's a visible tiny star of 5 to 10 km at the begining but with an insane mass, so if a star in it's race around the galaxy core pass to close to one and his captured by it, that star may have it's matter drained by the neutron star at some point the neutron star will reach the critical mass, and will become a black hole.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2bIqfskpMg
wwwwwwweeeeeeeeeEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
While the "universe inside a black hole" theory is intriguing, it is not widely defended by mainstream scientific communities and remains speculative at best. Most physicists continue to investigate the nature of black holes, quantum gravity, and cosmology through more traditional frameworks such as general relativity, quantum mechanics, and string theory. However, it remains a thought-provoking idea for those exploring the boundaries of modern physics and the potential connections between black holes and the broader universe.