Can anything stop a black hole?
According to Einstein's general theory of relativity, the gravity of a black hole is so intense that nothing can escape it.
Answer: Within the event horizon of a black hole space is curved to the point where all paths that light might take to exit the event horizon point back inside the event horizon. This is the reason why light cannot escape a black hole.
The bottom line is: If a regular black hole and an antimatter black hole got black-hole-married in space, they wouldn't vanish. Feeding in antimatter won't do any good, it's just like regular matter or energy. It only makes the black hole more massive.
This energy takes the form of a slow-but-steady stream of radiation and particles that came to be known as Hawking radiation. With every bit of energy that escapes, the black hole loses mass and thereby shrinks, eventually popping out of existence altogether.
The most powerful supernova yet recorded (ASSASN-15lh) was 22 trillion times more explosive than a black hole will be in its final moments. It doesn't matter how small or how massive a black hole is, their closing fireworks are exactly the same. The only difference is how long it will take a black hole to explode.
Nope. You can still expect a normal human lifespan as measured by your own watch and calendar. Sure, billions of years would pass on the Earth in the meantime, but you will not experience billions of years.
Black holes are freezing cold on the inside, but incredibly hot just outside. The internal temperature of a black hole with the mass of our Sun is around one-millionth of a degree above absolute zero.
Astronomers discovered the pressure waves sent out by the black hole were causing ripples in the hot gas. Those vibrations could be translated into a musical note, but the note is far too low for humans to hear, some 57 octaves below middle C.
The closest known black hole may have been found a cosmic stone's throw from Earth, just 1500 light years away. Called Gaia BH1, it is estimated to be about 10 times the mass of our sun.
What If We Nuked A Black Hole? - YouTube
Has anyone escaped a black hole?
Netta Engelhardt Has Escaped Hawking's Black Hole Paradox | Quanta Magazine.
What are the chances of Earth being consumed by a black hole? Experts who spoke to Newsweek said there is practically zero chance of the Earth ever colliding with a black hole before it is swallowed by the sun in around five billion years' time.

Black holes will break up solitons and white holes may destroy them.