At present cosmologists think that dark energy is ripping the universe apart despite the force of gravity so the answer would be NO. However some cosmologists do not accept that dark energy is real and if this is true the answer would be "we do not yet know".
If gravity dominated the expansion of the universe, the universe would eventually stop expanding and begin to contract. This would lead to a "Big Crunch" scenario where all matter in the universe collapses back into a hot, dense state.
gravity is a force that pulls us on to the ground and earth makes the gravity.In space there is no gravity (scientist call this zero gravity) so gravity isn't pulling the universe back because there is no gravity outside planets.
Gravitation is the only force that acts universally.
Everything with mass or energy experiences gravity, from planets and stars to objects as small as a single atom. Gravity is a fundamental force in the universe that causes objects to be attracted to each other.
The big bang theory is the explosion that started the universe. Where as the big crunch is the theory where the universe will eventually contract and become increasingly clumped and eventaully all mater would collapse into black holes which would then coalesce producing a unified black hole or Big Crunch singularity.
yes because eveything in the universe have gravity
If gravity dominated the expansion of the universe, the universe would eventually stop expanding and begin to contract. This would lead to a "Big Crunch" scenario where all matter in the universe collapses back into a hot, dense state.
Closed: Is where there is sufficient gravity to halt the expansion of the universe, after which is slowly starts to contract until "The Big Crunch".
Gravity is the strongest force in the universe. Not because other forces are not more powerful, but because gravity reaches throughout the universe. Volcanoes really have very little effect on gravity.
Stars in the universe twinkle because of refraction not gravity.
The expansion or contraction of the universe is determined by the balance between the force of gravity (tending to pull matter together) and the force of expansion due to dark energy (driving matter apart). If dark energy dominates, the universe will expand; if gravity dominates, the universe will contract.
According to it the universe will contract and all particles come closer look like a ball and burst again. But it happens with gravity but gravity not as strong as at time of bigbang. This is now the question.
gravity is a force that pulls us on to the ground and earth makes the gravity.In space there is no gravity (scientist call this zero gravity) so gravity isn't pulling the universe back because there is no gravity outside planets.
Gravity regulates and repairs the universe.
There are three "simple types:* Closed: Is where there is sufficient gravity to halt the expansion of the universe, after which is slowly starts to contract until "The Big Crunch". * Open: Is where there is insufficient gravity to halt the expansion of the universe and it continues expanding and accelerating until it reaches either "the big freeze" or "big rip". * Flat: Is where there is insufficient gravity to halt the expansion of the universe and it continues to expand but slowly, ending the same as the open universe scenario.See link for further information.
There's gravity everywhere in the universe, including on the Moon. Because of the way gravity works, if you go to the moon, your weight when you're there will be about 16% of what it is on Earth.
Gravitation is the only force that acts universally.