stever19 said:
If this is correct would that not imply that the universe will eventually have nothing but black holes or just one giant black hole if they all combined together?
It is important to be aware, in case you were under the misapprehension, that black holes are nothing special gravitationally. They do not "suck in everything around them, growing infinitely" as is often thought.
If our sun were magically whisked away and replaced with a BH of 1 solar mass, nothing at all would change in Earth's orbit; it would happily continue to follow its one year orbit.
A sun-sized BH will suck in no more material than our Sun currently does.
Likewise, satellites in orbit around Earth are orbiting 3900 miles from the centre of the Earth (Earth is 3800 miles in radius, + 100 mile orbital altitude). If Earth were whisked away and replaced with a BH of one Earth mass, the satellites would never know the difference. An Earth-sized BH will not eat any more satellites than the Earth currently does.
What makes a BH special is that because of its small size, you can get a lot
closer to it before you reach its "surface". And closer means high Gs.
If one of those satellies were deorbited, it wouldn't stop at 3800 miles (like it would if Earth were still there); it could fall another 3799 miles before it reached the tiny BH, and that means many, many Gs.
But, generally in the universe, there's not much reason for objects to get that close. So, it's not like the universe is going to be swallowed up by BHs.