Gravity causes interstellar clouds of hydrogen to coalesce. At first the clouds tend to be inelastic. What precipitates collapse may be a supernova shock wave or the passing of some massive body, such as a big star or black hole. In one galaxy a few million light years away new stars are forming in the wake of a big black hole orbiting through the plane of the galaxy. It is quite beautiful.
Once the cloud condenses into a sphere, collisions and pressure between hydrogen atoms cause the core to heat up. The newly formed body becomes a protostar, shining with the light and heat of gravitational collapse. This may continue for as long as a million years, though less for larger stars, until the core becomes so hot and dense atomic nuclei fuse together into heavier elements. This is known as a true star, and these all shine by the light of nuclear energy.
Gravity.
Gravity
a force unknown to mankind -- call it life energy
Gravity..
Gravity and nuclear force
yes, everything exerts a force on each other, no matter how small or big the force is, there is still a force.
The radiant energy coming through the force of the cumulus would not be as well if there were no clouds at all, but since said question any other kinds of clouds besides tornado black clouds and cumulus would be fine.
a force unknown to mankind -- call it life energy
electromagnetic force
Gravity, as it is the force which attracts the matter together.
No it is the force holding the atomic nuclei together.
Gravity..
If Coulomb's force is gone , the material structure of the Cosmos would be gone. Coulomb's force hold atoms together and molecules together and matter together.
Gravitational pull is a force that has an affect on absolutely everything in this universe
Because of gravity. Only gravity can pull large clouds together with enough force to overcome gas pressure.
gravity
All phases of matter have the strong force. It is the force that occurs in the nuclei of atoms and holds the protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.
The electromagnetic force holds unlike particles of matter together. In chemistry, that would be positively and negatively charged ions, and the protons and electrons in individual atoms.
Gravity. Well, the strong nuclear force and the electromagnetic force can pull matter together, but electrical and magnetic forces can also repel. Gravity always attracts. This particular question is pretty obviously about gravity.