Gravity: Mass vs. Size Explained

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Gravity is determined by the mass of an object, not its size, meaning that if the Sun were to become a small black hole, Earth's orbit would remain unchanged unless additional mass were introduced. Black holes typically remain stationary, growing only through interactions with other objects, and can theoretically lose mass over time through a process called Hawking radiation, although this has not been observed. The discussion also touches on the concept of artificial gravity, clarifying that true gravity is a fundamental property of matter, and current technologies can only simulate gravitational effects. There are no known methods to create gravity or antigravity outside of mass itself. Overall, gravity remains a consistent force governed by mass, with no current means to artificially replicate it.
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Hello all,
i would like to start at the beginning please, am i right in thinking that gravity is created by the Mass of an object and has nothing to do with its actual size?
 
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Yes.
If the Sun somehow transformed into a small black hole (it won't), the Earth would still experience the same gravity and remain in the same orbit.
 
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is this unless the black hole was able to get extra matter?
 
Yes, I'm assuming nothing other than the Sun is involved, but the fact that it has now hypothetically turned into a black hole won't magically cause additional matter to appear in the solar system which could increase it's mass.
 
so most black holes should really just sit there, can they close up or would they just go on and on?
 
Kev. said:
so most black holes should really just sit there, can they close up or would they just go on and on?
What do you mean by "sit there", "close up", "go on and on"?
 
sorry I'm very new to this, would the black hole hold its position in space like the sun does? close up as in the event horizon close of and disappear or would the back hole just remain open all the time, i thought i read somewhere that a black hole could run out of steam and fade away
 
I'll answer this, but first a tip about posting on forums in general.
You are now wandering off of the original topic which is generally considered to be a 'bad thing' because it can easily get to the point where the topic title no longer relates to the discussion.
It's always best to start a new topic if you want to talk about something not directly related to the original post.

Anyway so ...black holes over a period of time manage to clear out the region of space close to them and stop growing.
After this they only grow in occasional stages when a chance encounter occurs with an other object, but most the time they would indeed 'just sit there'.
Stephen Hawkins has proposed that they can eventually start to actually lose mass (evaporate is the term used) through a form of radiation, but this has not yet been been verified by observation.
It's quite an exotic form of radiation resulting from quantum mechanical effects, and probably it can't be verified since the process would take billions of years.
 
your right about wondering off, I've never been on forums before I'm just full of questions and i do have a tendency to say random things,
back to the gravity stuff, are we any closer to creating artificial gravity or is that just a pipe dream?
 
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Gravity is equivalent to acceleration.
A pilot of a fast jet experiences 'g' forces when maneuvering for this reason.
G forces can also be experienced by a person placed in a centrifuge, and it's part of astronaut training.
We can also fake an absence of gravity, wieghtlessness, by flying an aircraft in a particular way.

However there are no gravity or antigravity boots or similar, gravity is a fundamental property of matter.
There is nothing I know of other than matter which can produce a true gravitational field (as opposed to the variations of simulated gravity which I mentioned.)
The field is entirely a result of the mass and nothing else.
There may be exotic forms of matter which are different to the normal matter we know of, but for now anyway no such stuff exists except as abstract mathematical conjectures.
Everything with mass that we know of interacts gravitationally, and everything which does so does it in exactly the same way.
 
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