Which change in the sun’s gravity would occur if the sun’s mass were reduced by one-half?(1 point)

.
It would be halved.

It would be unchanged.

It would be zero.

It would be doubled.

Alright here are the answers

1. What did gravity create when 99% of the gas and dust materials were gathered into the center of a flattened disc during the formation of the solar system?

The sun*

How were the planets in the solar system formed?

The remaining materials from the sun's formation clumped together due to gravity*

What prevents the gravity of the sun to pull all of the planets towards it?

the planets' speed as they orbit the sun*

Which change in the sun’s gravity would occur if the sun’s mass were reduced by one-half?

It would be halved*

The correct response is it would be halved.

It would of halved I just took it

Tyy char!

F = G M m / d^2

half M ----> half F

If the sun's mass were reduced by one-half, the change in its gravity can be determined using the formula for gravitational force:

F = G * (m1 * m2) / r^2

Where:
F is the gravitational force between two objects,
G is the gravitational constant,
m1 and m2 are the masses of the two objects, and
r is the distance between the centers of the two objects.

In this case, since we are considering only the sun's mass, m1 is the mass of the sun (before the reduction) and m2 is the mass of any other object affected by the sun's gravity. r would be the distance between the center of the sun and the center of the other object.

If the sun's mass is reduced by one-half (m1/2), the new gravitational force (F') between the sun and the other object can be calculated as:

F' = (G * (m1/2) * m2) / r^2

By simplifying the equation, we can see that the sun's mass (m1) is halved, meaning the new gravitational force (F') would also be halved. Hence, the correct answer is:
It would be halved.

no its the real answers are b.d.c.d

Correct answers:

1. C
2. B
3. A
4. A

Science

1.D
2.C
3.A
4.C
This will get you a 100% promise you that because I just got a 100% on it right now.