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i allways wondered how vacume in space beyond the stars can be there? how did all the matter suck in, in the first place?

2007-05-29 09:35:01 · 2 answers · asked by Sam 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

i mean, gravity holds lumps togeather (planets, stars) and the space vacume sucks it out. so where is it all moving to and will it ever balance out? so there no vacume in space? its like the atoms are pulled togeather yet vacume pulls it out. im using limited vocabulary/understanding what happens if all energy balanced out?

2007-05-29 09:39:15 · update #1

2 answers

Space has some particles in it but the gravity is pulling every thing out of the space . Vacuum is not a force as u are talking about it. That will never balance out. Even though the sun blows many particles its gravity pulls much of it back. The vacuum is so good that when we send a TV repeater up there we do not put the Traveling wave tubes in a glass envelope. The gravity pull everything out of space.

2007-05-29 09:57:43 · answer #1 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 1 0

Outerspace actually has matter in it, just an incredable small amount.

2007-05-29 09:39:43 · answer #2 · answered by Alex 6 · 1 1

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