Please check the difference between the words "affect" and "effect". In this case, it should be "affect".
Gravity keeps the stars together in the first place. It compresses them so much that they become hot and dense in their cores; enough so to start nuclear fusion.
Gravity effects stellar evolution by pulling down force on the stars while they are forming. Mass will determine how long the star stays alive and burning.
Gravity keeps the planets in orbit around the sun and the stars and the stars in orbit around the center of the galaxy. Gravity also holds the stars together against their own internal pressure.
Yes. Stars form when clouds of gas and dust, called nebulae, collapse under the force of gravity.
If there were no gravity, period, there would be no stars. If gravity ceased to work, there would be a whole lot of violent explosions as the nuclear, mechanical and other forces within the stars popped the stellar balloons, so to speak.
It depends on how much gravity that causes stars to form. It depends on how big the star in the galaxies is.
The stars are too far away of Earth's gravity to have any noticeable effect on them.
Gravity effects stellar evolution by pulling down force on the stars while they are forming. Mass will determine how long the star stays alive and burning.
Stars in the universe twinkle because of refraction not gravity.
yes because they levitate in space gravity does hold stars up
They aren't. Stars form as a result of a cloud of gas collapsing due to gravity.
Gravity keeps the planets in orbit around the sun and the stars and the stars in orbit around the center of the galaxy. Gravity also holds the stars together against their own internal pressure.
Planets and stars have gravity.
Acceleration does not effect gravity. It is rather the other way round. Gravity can affect the rate of acceleration.
The answer is simple: gravity.
There is gravity. There is gravity on all planets, moons, and stars.
Gravity doesn't just "affect" the formation of stars; it's just about the only force that CAUSES the stars to form in the first place.
It is really the other way round - gravity has an effect on weight. The more gravity, the more weight.