Want this question answered?
A white dwarf supernova can only happen in binary pairs where the white dwarf rips matter from the larger star and eventually becomes unstable and it collapses in on itself.
Matter cannot be created nor destroyed
there is no more matter
You would be seven, no matter where you happen to be.
Matter is lost and energy is released.
A white dwarf supernova can only happen in binary pairs where the white dwarf rips matter from the larger star and eventually becomes unstable and it collapses in on itself.
True
true
The White Dwarf in space is also called a degenerate dwarf which is a stellar remnant composed mostly of electron degenerate matter. This can happen in binary pairs where the white dwarf rips matter from the larger star and eventually becomes unstable and it collapses in on itself.
It doesn't really matter, but I find inward to the pasture is easier as you dont have to back out of the way as it swings open.
Nothing will happen. All solid objects are made from matter!
It is not the best way, but it can be done. Different players have different ways of controlling their hurley.
Blocks That Matter happened in 360.
A neutron star.
An absolute vacuum is purely theoretical, and is an utter absence of matter. An implosion is essentially a violent inward collapse.
it will melt
Dark matter is a superdense form of matter, where the mass of the material is so great that it collapses down to a tiny point, similar to the effect of a black hole but with nowhere near the force, so technically it could be considered lower than a solid.