Science, asked by chaserox59, 9 months ago

Before a star is a star, it is an enormous cloud of gases. At the start, wisps of gas and drifts of dust collect, their gravity drawing them together. As more stuff gathers, its combined gravitation grows stronger. Eventually the cloud pulls itself into a massive ball of material.

—A Black Hole Is NOT a Hole,
Carolyn Cinami DeCristofano

Describe the cause-and-effect relationships in this passage that lead to the formation of a star.

Before a star is a star, it is an enormous cloud of gases. At the start, wisps of gas and drifts of dust collect, their gravity drawing them together. As more stuff gathers, its combined gravitation grows stronger. Eventually the cloud pulls itself into a massive ball of material.

—A Black Hole Is NOT a Hole,
Carolyn Cinami DeCristofano

Describe the cause-and-effect relationships in this passage that lead to the formation of a star. (Its a writing question)

Answers

Answered by silkeysup
3

Answer:

you're asking the question or giving the answer .

Answered by sunflower0819
15

Answer:

Gravity causes gas and dust to come together. More gas and dust combining causes the gravitation to strengthen. The stronger gravitation causes a massive ball of material that eventually becomes a star.

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