a black hole.
An object with gravity so strong that nothing can escape is called a black hole. These regions of spacetime have such intense gravitational force that they trap even light, which is why they appear "black" or invisible to outside observers.
A black hole is an object that absorbs the most light because its gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape it once it crosses a certain threshold called the event horizon.
The amount of gravity pulling on an object is called weight. Weight is the force exerted by gravity on an object's mass.
The force with which gravity pulls an object is called its weight. This weight is determined by the mass of the object and the acceleration due to gravity at that location.
Perhaps surprisingly, it is called the force of gravity.
An object with gravity so strong that nothing can escape is called a black hole. These regions of spacetime have such intense gravitational force that they trap even light, which is why they appear "black" or invisible to outside observers.
Escape Velocity
Black hole
That is called a "black hole".
A black hole, I think.
A "Singularity" or a "black hole".
A black hole is an object that absorbs the most light because its gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape it once it crosses a certain threshold called the event horizon.
A black hole is an object so massive that light cannot escape its gravity, due to the intense gravitational pull caused by its mass and density.
a black hole is your answer and it is because when a main sequenced star collects to much energy the gravity stops and forms a black hole
A black hole
No. A black hole is a highly compressed massive object with gravity so strong that nothing can escape once it passes a certain point.
The amount of gravity pulling on an object is called weight. Weight is the force exerted by gravity on an object's mass.