Your "weight" is the magnitude of the gravitational force between you
and another mass.
-- In deep space, far from any other mass, the gravitational force between
you and any other mass would be very small, but never zero.
-- Near a back hole, the gravitational force between you and the black hole
would be
(gravitational constant) x (your mass) x (black hole's mass)/(your distance from the black hole)2
No. Without friction or air resistance, no force is required to keep an object moving at a constant velocity. Also, by the way, just thought we should mention: In deep space, the ship has no weight.
If the Sun were to collapse into a black hole, its mass would remain the same, so the Earth's orbit and rotation around the black hole would continue as normal. However, without the Sun's light and heat, the Earth would quickly cool down and life would cease to exist.
Black holes have immense gravity that can distort space and time, pulling in anything that comes too close. Once an object crosses the event horizon of a black hole, it cannot escape, as not even light can travel fast enough to overcome the pull. This means that entering a black hole would lead to certain destruction due to the extreme forces involved.
No, it is perfectly safe to look deep into space. Interesting astronomical information will result.
Yes, an object with mass can have no weight if it is in a state of free fall or in a location where gravitational force is negligible, such as in deep space. Weight is the force exerted by gravity on an object, so if that gravitational force is absent or counteracted, the object will not experience weight, even though it still possesses mass.
In deep space where the gravitational force is zero, you would be essentially weightless. Weight is the force exerted by gravity on an object, so in the absence of gravity, there would be no force acting on you to give you weight.
I think because it would take up to mush space and weight.
Deep space
No, not even close. Deep space would be well outside the solar system.
Objects in deep space experience weightlessness due to the absence of gravity. Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object, and this force diminishes the further away from a massive body an object is. In deep space, objects are freefalling, experiencing only the slight gravitational pulls of distant celestial bodies.
Deep space appears black to human eyes because it is primarily a vacuum with very little matter to reflect or emit light. However, there are colorful celestial objects within deep space such as stars, galaxies, and nebulae that can be seen with telescopes.
The effect of the existence of black holes is supported by observational evidence. There have as yet been no observations that would support the existence of the other items on this list.
The weight of a body depends upon the force of gravity acting upon that body. A 50 kg body will have a weight that is 50 times that of a 1 kg mass. The weight of the body will be different on earth, on the moon and in deep space (zero).
they use high frequency sound waves to penetrate deep into the atmosphere and possibly a black hole if you are lucky
deep space antiprobe
No. Without friction or air resistance, no force is required to keep an object moving at a constant velocity. Also, by the way, just thought we should mention: In deep space, the ship has no weight.
No, using this analogy, a black hole would be a horrible deep depression in the carpet, where all matter would accumulate, dog hairs, dust, crumbs and other bits of detritus that normally fall onto a carpet.