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Discussions,Debates,Latest News > Why Don't Neutron Stars Collapse

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message 1: by Dua (new)

Dua Khan | 1 comments There are some things in the universe whose form is easy in theory, like black holes. Bring a fairly large volume in a compact volume and it is more difficult to avoid gravity If you accumulated a lot of things in one place and let gravity do its work, you would eventually pass a significant limit, where the need to escape gravity would exceed the speed of light.Reach this point, and you create a black hole
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message 2: by Thomas (new)

Thomas Abbott | 1 comments Neutron stars are supported by neutron degeneracy pressure, which is a consequence of neutrons not wanting to be squeezed together too tightly (Pauli Exclusion Principle).


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