Want this question answered?
Huge hot balls of gas that are held together by gravity and give off their own light are called stars. The sun is also a star.
I don't think there is a scientific concept called "gravity light". There is gravity, and there is light. The two are not directly related.
Gravity of Light was created in 2010.
Yes as explained in the theory of relativity Yes. Light is affected by gravity, but because light travels so fast, the effect is not noticeable under most conditions. As light passes by something with mass its path bends toward the object in what is called gravitational lensing. We have observed this effect around massive galaxies as the light from galaxies behind them is distorted.
Does gravity gve off its own light? What a stupid question, gravity is a force, you cant even see it. Nebulas are clouds of gas, but newly formed stars within them can give off light. Remember, everything you can see is giving off light.
Huge hot balls of gas that are held together by gravity and give off their own light are called stars. The sun is also a star.
Stars.
I don't think there is a scientific concept called "gravity light". There is gravity, and there is light. The two are not directly related.
Please clarify what you mean by "gravity light". I am not aware of any physical concept commonly called by that name.
Light is affected by gravity, if the gravity is immense. In a black hole, the gravity is so immense that light cannot escape from it, hence it cannot be seen - whcih is why it's called a "black hole".
gravity clumped stars together, created planets and stopped everything from moving at the speed of light
A lens that forms images by refracting light rays together is called what?
Gravity of Light was created in 2010.
That is called a "black hole".
A black hole
That'd be a star
When there's no gravity, light just travels in one direction at the speed of light. Gravity bends the direction at which light travels.