The Law of Universal Gravitation.
Stars. That is how stars are formed. They form from nebulae.
No, all-stars are not formed by nebulas. All-stars are formed from clouds of gas and dust called molecular clouds, which collapse under their own gravity to form a star. Nebulas are massive clouds of dust and gas in space, where stars are born.
Clouds of gas and dust in which stars form are called nebulae. These regions of space are where the raw materials for star formation gather and eventually collapse under their own gravity to give birth to new stars.
Nebulae are not stars. They are clouds of dust, hydrogen, helium, and other ionized gases in space where stars are born. Some nebulae can be observed because of the light of nearby stars reflecting off their gas and dust.
Yes. Stars form when clouds of gas and dust, called nebulae, collapse under the force of gravity.
Stars. That is how stars are formed. They form from nebulae.
Dust sticks to clouds, because of electricity.
No, all-stars are not formed by nebulas. All-stars are formed from clouds of gas and dust called molecular clouds, which collapse under their own gravity to form a star. Nebulas are massive clouds of dust and gas in space, where stars are born.
Clouds of gas and dust
nebulas
"Clouds" of gas (and dust) concentrated by gravity.
The answer is actually Nebulae.
Stars are formed by hot clouds of gas and dust, named nebulas.
The prevailing view is that stars form from the gravitational collapse of immense clouds of gas and dust in outer space.
Stars begin their lives as clouds of gas and space dust.
They get enegry by giant clouds of dust called nebulae.
Stars form in the great clouds of gas and dust in the spiral arms of a galaxy.