Neopeius said:
Starblazers said:
Is it theoretically possible for a black hole at the center of our galaxy to eventually "suck down" (I dont know the right terminolgy to use) our whole galaxy? If so, wouldn't the dense core of the collpased star be larger because it would have trapped a whoel galaxy's worth of matter?
Well, you have to remember that black holes don't create extra suction. They are simply the end of the lifecycle of a big star, or in the case of the center of a galaxy, lots and lots of stars.
The stars in the rest of the galaxy still orbit around the center, and it's unlikely that many of them will be perturbed from their orbit enough to become part of the supermassive center. Sort of like if you turned the sun into a black hole (without any intermediary steps), it would be a very tiny thing now, but it would have the same mass. Things would get very cold in the solar system, but the orbits of the planets would remain unchanged.
We certainly haven't seen any indication that black holes "devour" galaxies. I think the biggest one we've found has a mass of "only" a few billion suns.