0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
Quote from: Geezer on 13/12/2009 00:57:40Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 13/12/2009 00:20:51Farsight.. enough. You have seen my reply - your archiac science has no place when considering these things. Obviously if gravity is a physical force, it must have a work associated to it.I don't think so. Mr S, I presume you are sitting on a chair. Gravity is exerting a force on you and the chair is reacting to that force to support your mass. While the chair continues to support that mass, no work is done. If the chair collapses and you fall to the ground, work has been done. Just because there is a force it does not mean work is being done. Now you're talking rubbish.To have any physical system do work, there must be a force applied to it. This was simple Newtonian dynamics. The chair collapsing does not because of the overwhelming electrostatic force, not the gravity which almost surely cancels out.
Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 13/12/2009 00:20:51Farsight.. enough. You have seen my reply - your archiac science has no place when considering these things. Obviously if gravity is a physical force, it must have a work associated to it.I don't think so. Mr S, I presume you are sitting on a chair. Gravity is exerting a force on you and the chair is reacting to that force to support your mass. While the chair continues to support that mass, no work is done. If the chair collapses and you fall to the ground, work has been done. Just because there is a force it does not mean work is being done.
Farsight.. enough. You have seen my reply - your archiac science has no place when considering these things. Obviously if gravity is a physical force, it must have a work associated to it.
You may try to redefine the definition of work all you want, but it's already been defined. Sorry.
Quote from: Geezer on 13/12/2009 07:57:35You may try to redefine the definition of work all you want, but it's already been defined. Sorry.And by the way.. i never redefined anything. The work is basic textbook physics.
I give up. I am telling you all, there is work assocoiated to the gravity of something. If it didn't, gravitational objects could not move. It's very simple.
It is in error, because gravity is the same as matter, and since matter does work, the postulation speaks for itself
Quote from: Mr. Scientist on 12/12/2009 19:36:08It is in error, because gravity is the same as matter, and since matter does work, the postulation speaks for itself The unit of mass is the kilogram.The units in which gravity gets measured depend on how you look at it but they are either M^3/S^-2/Kg or just Kg M S^-2two things with different units are not the same thing.Gravity is a force and matter is what forces act on.They are plainly different and it's silly to say they are the same.For what it's worth, Einstein said that mass was the equivalent of energy rather than of gravity.
QuoteI give up. I am telling you all, there is work assocoiated to the gravity of something. If it didn't, gravitational objects could not move. It's very simple. Dearie me, Mr S,That doesn't strike me as being too scientific. If you'll pardon my unscientific opinion, it sounds a lot more like"Proof By Loud Assertion" than anything else.BTW, gravitational objects move by virtue of their kinetic energy. What's to slow them down?G
Yes. Gravitrons may explain how the gravitational force is communicated. But how would that force be able to impart a force that is orthagonal to it?