^ Needs NOT to be taken down and brought back to Earth to be studied, prodded, and and executed by NASA
^Is incorrect because I know that When an object crosses the black hole's event horizon, that is, the point in which gravity is so powerful that nothing can escape, it undergoes a process called "spaghettification" in which it is stretched and pulled into a new shape by the black hole's tidal forces (yes, "spaghettification" is the actual name). After this, it falls to a point in the black hole called the "gravitational singularity," where the force of gravity has an infinite strength. The object is now completely destroyed and becomes a part of the black hole. The black hole then gains more mass and volume and becomes less dense.