0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Is this your idea of gravity in 3D because the source is reputable?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 26/02/2021 21:35:04If you think there are paradoxes in General relativity(1) what are they and(2) do you really think that you would be the first one to notice them?The answers for the age old paradoxes are silly. The last one I watched said the twin clock paradox was solved by the twin's return journey home on a cell phone. That is when I researched answers to that paradox. What is your silly answer to it?
If you think there are paradoxes in General relativity(1) what are they and(2) do you really think that you would be the first one to notice them?
A random YouTuber is not a reputable source.
So your denying a fact that the image in the video is what the professor's experiment looks like from the top. Why are you arguing that?
You should lose
So far, you haven't given any evidence to support your idea.
Hence it is only on an internet forum. This is new theories isn't it? I suppose your going to ramble on about what new theories are by definition.
Sounds like you are admitting that you don't have evidence.
I showed you the visual evidence that gravity looks more like a squeezing pressure then a bending.
You can't seemingly have a gravity wave if you have time dilation.
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 26/02/2021 22:14:17I showed you the visual evidence that gravity looks more like a squeezing pressure then a bending.Where?
For the ten thousandth time what is your problem with the fact that the top view of the trampoline experiment shows space getting squeezed rather then bent?
If your not going to answer I'm done
For the ten-thousandth time, do you know what a visual analogy is?
The lasdies must love you because your such a great dancer. Danced around my question 4 TIMES in this thread alone. Dancin' and spinin', emitin' them gravityiationale waves.
The fact that you keep trying to misrepresent a visual analogy as the way gravity literally works in real life isn't my fault.
If an object moving through space experiences time dilation how would gravity waves effect it? You can't seemingly have a gravity wave if you have time dilation. The electron shell could be a result of the gravity field of the nucleus. The electron shell allows for light of a certain amount to fill it at all times. It could be a property of a wave that has never been heard of before where the wave fighting out against the gravity pulling in creates the shell effect. It's such highly dense space at the nucleus that it would be like looking into forever darkness and the light gets trapped fighting its way out but cannot be pulled in because of the singularity that space is without gravity waves.
wave generators at each end of the tank. If the wave generators are 180 degrees out of phase, the waves coming from each side will be equal and opposite; plus and minus charge and will cancel.