A sun is a gigantic balancing act: energetic output from fusing hydrogen pushing out, while gravity due to it's mass pulls inwards. This goes on throughout the lifetime of the star.<br /><br />When it finally dies, all of it's mass is now pulled inwards. There's no further fusion activity, so there's no longer anything to counter the gravitational pull.<br /><br />Over a certain mass (1.44 times our sun's own mass), when it collapses, the gravitational pull is enough to counter what's know as the Pauli Exclusion force. In essence, it allows the atoms to get much closer than they normally could (thanks to gravity overcoming the Pauli Exclusion Force). The proton and electrons are lost, and what's left is all neutrons, packed into a sort of crystalline matrix, with a gigantic surface gravity and tiny size.<br /><br />And a black hole is comprised of all of the matter that was once a star. To become a black hole, the star takes the next step *beyond* that of becoming a neutron star - and again, based on it's mass (about 3 times the mass of our sun, known as the "Chandresekhar limit"). As well, it's death is violent, which is to say, a Supernova.<br /><br />The gravity of the copllapsing star is enough to overcome the Neutron exclusion law, which is an equivalent law to Pauli. At the mass mentioned, it's overcome, and matter can be packed even *closer* together. So close, in fact, that it collapse all of the way down to a point.<br /><br />Gravity effects everything, including light - which is the "speed limit" for transferring information in our universe. Because in this case the star compactifies with so much mass, it collapses to the point that even light can't escape. Voila! A Singularity, which is effectively detached from our universe. We don't really know what goes on in there (except for some mathematical speculation), because if even light can't escape, no information can escape from inside.<br /><br />There is some speculation about Singularities and what they <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p><em>Differential Diagnosis: </em>"<strong><em>I am both amused and annoyed that you think I should be less stubborn than you are</em></strong>."<br /> </p> </div>