Linguofreak
Well-known member
Fun fact: such a situation can't even be considered in general relativity, because it contradicts Einstein's equations. Those equations have conservation of energy built-in in themselves in a way, and sudden disappearing of the Sun would violate conservation of energy quite a bit.
But would that matter to how regions outside the sun would react? The laws of physics are violated within the region of space containing the sun, but let's consider that region to be a black box where we leave the exact contents and laws of physics inside the region undefined, and only specify that it reacts with the outside universe in such a way that it appears to have a mass of 1 solar mass.
1) For that apparent mass to disappear, does General Relativity need to be violated outside the "black box sun" (that is, in any region where the density of mass/energy doesn't change)?
2) If the answer to 1) is "no", would there be any gravitational effects noticable at Earth, other than the Sun's gravity cutting out after 8 minutes?