- Nov 14, 2003
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The effect of gravity is said to be identical to that of acceleration. This is why when you are in free fall, you have a feeling of weightlessness and don't feel gravity- the acceleration of falling exactly counters the "acceleration" effect of gravity.
This means we don't feel the gravity of the sun. We are in free fall, with the entire planet earth, in orbit around the sun, so we don't feel the effects of the sun's gravity. Also, because of our distance from the sun, even if we did feel the effects of it's gravity it wouldn't be very noticeable, according to a quick google search the sun's gravity on earth is about 0.0006 times the strength of the earth's gravity, seems barely noticeable.
However, the closer you get the stronger the force of gravity. Also, some other systems have much more massive stars, more compact stars, and some that are both. The obvious extreme is a black hole. But before you reach the level of a black hole, at some point you reach the threshold where the gravity is strong enough to kill a human.
This would, in some ways, be worse than passing the even horizon of a black hole. There would still be theoretical capability for a spaceship or craft to escape from the gravity at that point, but in doing so the force of acceleration would crush the occupants to death. I don't see any way around it. You either live in free fall for the rest of your time, or you try to fly away and get crushed by the force of gravity.
Now imagine if there was a solar system with such a massive/dense star that it's gravity was beyond the human limit of survival, but yet it had a hospitable planet within that limit. You could land there and live the rest of your life, but you could never escape. As long as you are in free fall around the star you would be fine and you wouldn't feel it's incredible gravity, but if you tried to fly away the only way to do so would be to accelerate beyond crushing speeds. Is this even possible, could a star with a gravity so strong have a planet in it's orbit, or would the orbit just decay too quickly?
tl;dr: I can't summarize this, maybe someone else will.
This means we don't feel the gravity of the sun. We are in free fall, with the entire planet earth, in orbit around the sun, so we don't feel the effects of the sun's gravity. Also, because of our distance from the sun, even if we did feel the effects of it's gravity it wouldn't be very noticeable, according to a quick google search the sun's gravity on earth is about 0.0006 times the strength of the earth's gravity, seems barely noticeable.
However, the closer you get the stronger the force of gravity. Also, some other systems have much more massive stars, more compact stars, and some that are both. The obvious extreme is a black hole. But before you reach the level of a black hole, at some point you reach the threshold where the gravity is strong enough to kill a human.
This would, in some ways, be worse than passing the even horizon of a black hole. There would still be theoretical capability for a spaceship or craft to escape from the gravity at that point, but in doing so the force of acceleration would crush the occupants to death. I don't see any way around it. You either live in free fall for the rest of your time, or you try to fly away and get crushed by the force of gravity.
Now imagine if there was a solar system with such a massive/dense star that it's gravity was beyond the human limit of survival, but yet it had a hospitable planet within that limit. You could land there and live the rest of your life, but you could never escape. As long as you are in free fall around the star you would be fine and you wouldn't feel it's incredible gravity, but if you tried to fly away the only way to do so would be to accelerate beyond crushing speeds. Is this even possible, could a star with a gravity so strong have a planet in it's orbit, or would the orbit just decay too quickly?
tl;dr: I can't summarize this, maybe someone else will.