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Quote from: alancalverdQuoteThe field must have energy.Not true - indeed meaningless. You need to expend energy to move a particle that interacts with the field. Not true at all. The gravitational field most certainty does have energy. That's a well-known fact in gravitational physics. See:http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/Numbers/Math/Mathematical_Thinking/possible_scalar_terms.htm
QuoteThe field must have energy.Not true - indeed meaningless. You need to expend energy to move a particle that interacts with the field.
The field must have energy.
Slight problem here. The dimensions of energy are ML2T-2 but those of gravitational field intensity are LT-2 and gravitational field potential L2T-2. No energy is involved until you introduce a mass into the field.
By itself, a lone mass produces a static gravitational field that extends to infinity, but it cannot do work or "produce energy". So there is no "leak" that drains energy or mass out of the massive object.
The middle is the centre of gravity and therefore within the mass itself.
Quote from: JeffreyHThe middle is the centre of gravity and therefore within the mass itself.This is true for a sphere (eg planet or star).However, there are some exception cases, for example, the letter "C".If you made a 3D solid "C", the center of gravity is in the middle of the "C", but it is not within the mass itself, because there is a big hole in the middle.
The author is talking about 2 contributions. One from the mass and one from the field itself.
Quote from: jeffreyHThis post made my day. Excellent! Quote from: jeffreyHThe middle is the centre of gravity and therefore within the mass itself. If this is a particle then your argument makes no sense.What is the gravitating body that you're talking about? The center of gravity isn't always the center of mass.
This post made my day.
The middle is the centre of gravity and therefore within the mass itself. If this is a particle then your argument makes no sense.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 14/11/2014 02:47:20Quote from: alancalverdQuoteThe field must have energy.Not true - indeed meaningless. You need to expend energy to move a particle that interacts with the field. Not true at all. The gravitational field most certainty does have energy. That's a well-known fact in gravitational physics. See:http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/Numbers/Math/Mathematical_Thinking/possible_scalar_terms.htmSlight problem here. The dimensions of energy are ML2T-2 but those of gravitational field intensity are LT-2 and gravitational field potential L2T-2. No energy is involved until you introduce a mass into the field.