Hi,
New here, just needed to fire off some burning questions. Been watching some vids on cosmology and here are few things I really don't get and can't find internet data about:
1) Shouldn't gravitational pull be strongest at the surface of a planet (assume uniform density for sake of simplicity). The gravitational pull inside the planet should have some cancelling effects on one another, and in the core will be net zero. This is validated by some google searches. But then, why do we believe the planets have a core? Isn't it more sensible to think we're just a spherical shell, perhaps many kilometers thick, held toward a center of gravity?
2) Following up on question one, how does gravity explain the theory that massive objects exert a force so powerful in the center due to gravity, that it overcomes electromagnetic forces and begins the process of fusion? If fusion takes place, shouldn't it be where gravity is strongest, ie. at some radius away from the center of gravity?
3) If gravitational force is directly related to mass and indirectly to distance from the center of mass, then hypothetically, 2 tiniest particles in terms of size touching each other would have a gravitational pull of infinity (as r approaches 0). This is provided the r can approach 0 more than mass m can approach 0. However, if this were true, then these 2 tiniest particles can be hypothetically broken down to think about the smaller exact point of contact between the 2 particles. This makes the gravitational effect further approach infinity, upon which, an infinite gravitational field should not just be a black hole, but should instantaneously suck in the entire universe. Since this didn't happen, would it be accurate to say that hypothetically, in 2 tiniest particles, mass m approaches 0 faster than r approaches 0?