I currently use particle accelerators to do research, so I'll let you know how they work and the maximum speed a charged particle can move through it. A particle accelerator can be either a linear or circular accelerator. One of the biggest one's in the world is the circular particle accelerator at FermiLab. This accelerator is the height of a house tall. A particle accelerator will only work on charged particles, i.e. protons, electrons, antiprotons, and positrons, but not neitrons and antineutrons (both are neutral). The particle accelerator itself is in the simplest terminology an electromagnet. The particle is taken from a point in the accelerator, then accelerated to near light speed velocities by using the magnetic fields generated by the electromagnets. Multiple particles with different charges are able to be accelerated in oppsosite direction. One use of the accelerator at FermiLab is they take antiprotons from the antiproton generator, and protons. They accelerate each one in opposite directions. They reach 99.9999% of the speed of light and then an orchestrated collision is performed under one of the sensors. The sensors take a "snap-shot" of the reaction and then the computers analyze the data from the collision. One use of this collsion is the search for "The God particle" or Higg. This particle is what is believed to give subatomic particle mass and gravitational fields. The reason for the sub-light speed speed-limit is due to the speed of electricity in the circular movement. Yes, electricity is moving at the speed of light (186,000 miles/second) but in the circular direction, the particle that is being accelerated is constantly changing direction. It is unable to reach the speed of light due to the constant velocity change. (the definition of velocity is speed in a given direction, in this instance the direction is constantly changing).
Theoretically in a black hole, matter is converted into energy, then from the spewing "burb" from the black hole energy is reconverted back into matter. In the center of a black hole is what is known as a quantum singularity. This is a point in space that has an infinite gravitional field that will "suck" any matter into and compress it under extremely large loads. Currently some physicists believe that a black hole may be the entrance to an Eintein-Rosen bridge (wormhole in lamens terms). An Eintein-Rosen bridge is beleived to connect 2 distant points in space so that when you go through the bridge the distance is shortened dramatically. Space is not a flat plane as many people perceive it to be. Space actually has indentations from gravity fields, such as stars, planets, moons, black holes, etc... All of the stress on the space-time continuum is believed to cause it to go around in a circle. An Einstein-Rosen bridge connects point A on top to point B on the bottom and allows you to go straight through the space-time continuum. In traditional space flight you would have to go around the entire circle to go from point A to point B.
To get back to a particle accelerator, when collisions between different particles occurs many different sub-atomic particles are formed. Bottom quarks are usually produced between collisions of protons and anti-protons. The sub-atomic world is much more complicated than we can ever believe. A few years ago we thought the smallest things were, protons, neutrons, and electrons. We now know that these particles are made up of different particles, such as the many different types of quarks, muons, tau particles, neutrinos, etc... Particle accelerators give us insight to these particles because as we destroy the bigger ones, they break apart into their smaller counterparts.