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Jeredin OP , to Ask Science in Area of gravity at the center of large, dense celestial bodies...
@Jeredin@lemm.ee avatar

So the larger the star, given that most (or all) aren’t uniform, there will come a gradient of gravity at its center that one can’t even call it low gravity - it’s heavy material is simply churning too much for their to be a stable center of gravity?

Jeredin OP , to Ask Science in Area of gravity at the center of large, dense celestial bodies...
@Jeredin@lemm.ee avatar

So it’s not zero but low gravity and increases the more mass-I leave behind me as I move out from the center?

Jeredin OP , to Ask Science in Area of gravity at the center of large, dense celestial bodies...
@Jeredin@lemm.ee avatar

So for the Sun, taking its density/pressure into account, will the same gravity gradient exist but on a much larger scale?

Thank you

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