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Fairly straightforward question/check of my understanding:
It is my understanding that energy gravitates (is that proper phrasing?), but not potential energy, since that is energy of a system, not internal energy of an object.
This would mean that as a star collapses and potential energy is converted to heat and pressure energy, its gravitational field measured from a distance would get stronger. Is that true? It seems to contradict what is typically said about black holes having exactly the same gravitational field strength at a distance after collapse as before - unless that's just a simplification due to the effect being small.
It is my understanding that energy gravitates (is that proper phrasing?), but not potential energy, since that is energy of a system, not internal energy of an object.
This would mean that as a star collapses and potential energy is converted to heat and pressure energy, its gravitational field measured from a distance would get stronger. Is that true? It seems to contradict what is typically said about black holes having exactly the same gravitational field strength at a distance after collapse as before - unless that's just a simplification due to the effect being small.