RayYates said:
This is a though experiment so please, ignore the fact the a star can not disapear.
Unfortunately, sometimes one cannot make a bad initial premise dissappear, even if it's a thought experiment.
This is one of those times.
If you've ever seen a mathematical proof that uses the "reducto ad absurdum" method, you can perhaps appreciate why.
The standard "reducto ad absurdum" proof goes "make a bad assumption, get nonsense, which then proves your initial assumption was bad'.
Note that it's important to realize that you get nonsense, if you don't realize this, you can spend a lot of non-productive time arising from false initial assumptions.
I understand the two dimensional representation of a ball on a "flat" sheet as curved space time is only poor representation of gravity.
I'm trying to understand, if mass can cause space time to curve toward the mass, (lets call that a positive curvature of space time) can space time have a negative curvature?
Positive and negative curvatures exist, but they don't have anything to do with whether the sheet goes up or down. The shape is the same.
Will the sheet bounce / reverberate if the ball were suddenly removed?
As was mentioned previously, the only honest answer to that question is "that can't happen". However, other sorts of disturbances can cause gravity waves, which you can think of as ripples in space-time, or in your analogy ripples passing along the sheet.