yes temperature doesnt matter.
2006-07-21 17:19:09
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answer #1
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answered by gjmb1960 7
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Temperature does not affect gravity... However, nothing in this universe is at absolute ZERO. The temperature of the vacuum in space is slightly above zero due to the left over heat from the big-bang. Any mass in the universe has not had sufficient time to cool down to even near that temperature. Especially if the mass is 10 times the Sun, it will still likely an active star. So, the setup assumed in this question is not possible.
2006-07-21 17:22:35
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answer #2
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answered by tkquestion 7
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Yes, of course it would. Can you imagine the unversal chaos if gravity depended upon temperature, or were even affected by it in the least? Thank God, that He created the physical realm with a bit more forethought than you showed in asking this.
2006-07-23 09:04:28
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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You just said it was a 10 solar mass object. 10 solar masses equates to a stupendous amount of gravity. A 10 solar mass object would collapse under its own weight faster than you can say "duh" and become a star. The question doesn't make sense. Stars are hot.
2006-07-21 17:26:50
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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No. Absolute 0 isn't attainable interior the organic surroundings. "Temperature" (or the quantity of warmth) is defined because the quantity of molecular or atomic stream interior of rely. seeing that atoms continually pass only particularly, there is continually some "warmth", and the "temperature" is very few fractions of a level about Absolute 0. Absolute 0 has come close, yet under no circumstances honestly reached, interior the laboratory. to attempt this they use lasers tuned on the precise frequency of a particular atom, or perhaps as the laser hits the atom it "stages" it in a unmarried axis. So the use SIX lasers (one in each and every axis) to "stages" the atom from all aspects. Doing this, they have taken ONE atom all the way down to about .001 degree above absolute 0. yet they have under no circumstances reached actual absolute 0- the position the atom stops shifting thoroughly.
2016-11-25 01:13:24
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answer #5
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answered by eisenhauer 4
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Temperature does not affect gravity. Also, nothing can ever reach absolute zero, only get asymptotically close.
2006-07-21 17:21:37
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answer #6
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answered by ymingy@sbcglobal.net 4
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Temperature and mass are completely independent on each other.
So yes, it has a gravity field around itself.
Th
2006-07-22 10:45:18
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answer #7
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answered by Thermo 6
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Temperature doesn't matter. Mercury is extreme hot on the sunny side but is extreme cold on the shadowed side, but that doesn't mean that Mercury has more gravity on the sunny side and less on the other side.
2006-07-21 18:33:32
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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1) gravity comes from having mass... i have gravity... weak... weak gravity...
2) matter cannot theoretically exist at absolute zero... the atoms like dont move and that makes them... like not atoms
2006-07-21 22:52:07
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answer #9
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answered by iMi 4
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Where is this massive object? If it's in space it has no gravity anyway.
2006-07-21 17:24:34
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answer #10
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answered by oldman 7
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gravity is created by mass.... temperature doesnt have anything to do with it.... anything that has mass will have gravity....
2006-07-21 17:20:51
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answer #11
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answered by Hanzel 2
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