littlebanger said:
thanks for the answer but it doesn't really explain much i do understand about the kenetic energy thing but really when something is pulled by a BH it should go to the BH not around it unless it has a force of some sort pushing it away when it gets closer . from what i seen they orbit in an oval shape how is that even possible if you know what i mean . i just think if something is pulled by a BH it should go to it or though it not around no matter how big the kentic energy is. wouldn't it always be weaker than the force pulling ? i could understand a circle orbit but not an oval one
not one sinlge planet, asteroid, or comet orbits the sun in a perfect circle. as a matter of fact, they all orbit the sun in the shape of an ellipse. its just a matter of eccentricity (how pronounced the eliipse is). the Earth's orbit is nearly circular, but not perfectly so, and so it orbits the sun in an ellipse of low eccentricity. sometimes your intuition/instincts can mislead you.
back to your original question, if an object were on a direct path (collision course) with a black hole, then yes, it would fall into it. but very few objects in the universe are on direct collision courses with other objects. therefore, most objects just come really close to each other and not directly at each other. in some cases, the objects can come within a close enough range of one another that their mutual gravitation can pull them into orbit around each other. at any rate, it is b/c the velocity of one object relative to another most often has both radial AND angular components (and not just a radial component, implying a direct collision course) that objects typically orbit each other and don't simply collide head-on.
if you still can't picture it, think of orbiting as "falling." when you run off the edge of a tall building, you travel both forward and down before hitting the ground. when you drive a fast car off the edge of the building, again you travel both forward and down before hitting the ground, but this time you will have probably traveled forward much farther than you did when you ran off the edge of the building. ultimately though, you eventually hit the ground. the reason for this is b/c the curvature traced out by the combination of your forward and downward motions is much smaller than the curvature of the surface of the earth. now imagine launching yourself off the edge of the building so fast that the curve traced out by the combination of your forward and downward motions match the curvature of the surface of the earth. then you would continue "falling" around the earth, but you would maintain a constant altitude and never hit the ground. this is called "orbiting." contrast this situation with one in which you are standing atop a tall building that suddenly vanishes beneath your feet. b/c you have no lateral/horizontal (forward/backward) velocity when the building vanishes, you fall directly toward the center of the earth. it is also easy to see that your velocity consists only of a radial component, and has no angular component, which is also why you don't fall in any other direction other than directly toward the center of the earth. you can replace the Earth with a black hole, and the same concepts/physics apply.
now the instances i highlighted above are oversimplified obviously, and nothing orbits something else forever, or vice versa. energy is radiated away in the process of orbiting, and angular momentum is lost over time. hence, eventually orbiting bodies will orbit closer and closer until the collide/merge. a star continuously loses orbital energy as it orbits around a black hole, and will eventually fall in. why don't we ever hear about these events happening in reality? b/c stars take millions or billions of years to sprial into the black hole, depending on both the initial distance between them and their angular velocity with respect to each other. so we're lucky to see such a thing happen in our lifetime, let alone be able to resolve the general vicinity of a black hole with a telescope in enough detail to observe such an event.
hope that helps...