0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I thought it had been recently established, that it's all due to the Higg's boson. This boson creates a "field" which has a "dragging" effect on particles, which we perceive as "mass".And this "mass" produces a "heaviness", which we used to attribute to a "gravitational force", but now we know it isn't, it's just the result of the Higg's boson's "field".I mean how much clearer can you get?
I thought it had been recently established, that it's all due to the Higg's boson. This boson creates a "field" which has a "dragging" effect on particles, which we perceive as "mass".
Is 21st century physics in a crisis?
Relativity and Quantum Mechanics... don't agree with each other. Therefore there is something wrong about both of them.
General Relativity describes the universe on a large scale, which is dominated by the force of gravity.
Quote from: evan_au on 31/12/2016 05:59:01General Relativity describes the universe on a large scale, which is dominated by the force of gravity.What is the reasoning behind describing Gravity as a force?I thought GR viewed it through the prism of the geometry of spacetime.Is there a reason it can be called a "force"? It is not the same as Newtonian force ,is it?
F = mag = Gm/r2g = aF = force
Quote from: jeffreyH on 31/12/2016 13:51:29F = mag = Gm/r2g = aF = forceThose are Newtonian equations? Is the concept of force limited to the mathematics of Newtonian gravity and so inapplicable to areas where Newtonian gravity does not apply?EDIT: we cross-posted..
Add in the speed limit on information transfer (the speed of light) and viola!Curved spacetime.