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The crisis of 21st century physics is this:It has produced two different, and entirely irreconcilable, descriptions of what happens in the Universe:1. Relativity Theory2. Quantum MechanicsThey don't agree with each other. Therefore there is something wrong about both of them.
james Muirhead asked the Naked Scientists: What is the source of the force of gravity or what is it that reaches up from the Earth to pull the apple downward?What do you think?
Release your marbles simultaneously from the top of the box. They will fall to the bottom. If you are being accelerated, their trajectories will be parallel, but if you are on the surface of a planet their trajectories will converge on the centre of the planet, so they will converge as they fall.
The first argument you use is one where you assume that the rockets center of mass (engine) is evenly distributed over the whole 'floor' of the rocket, right? I actually wonder there whether the rockets 'center of mass' won't be situated in a 'middle' of that floor too?
The source of gravity is mass. To be precise its active gravitational mass. The mass generates a gravitational field and the field exerts a force on whatever is in the field. The mechanism to do this is currently unknown. All we know is how it works, not why it works.
Anybody like to speculate why it works?
Quote from: PmbPhy on 27/12/2016 23:23:27The source of gravity is mass. To be precise its active gravitational mass. The mass generates a gravitational field and the field exerts a force on whatever is in the field. The mechanism to do this is currently unknown. All we know is how it works, not why it works. Anybody like to speculate why it works?
It should be possible to create a surface curved in such a way that a ball rolling along it under the influence of gravity will have a constant velocity. The creation of such a surface will be useful in the study of gravitation.
Quote from: PmbPhy on 27/12/2016 23:23:27The source of gravity is mass. To be precise its active gravitational mass. The mass generates a gravitational field and the field exerts a force on whatever is in the field. The mechanism to do this is currently unknown. All we know is how it works, not why it works.Anybody like to speculate why it works?
When describing an acceleration or deceleration - acceleration is simply a phenomenon where it takes a lesser amount of time to cover the same distance. And a deceleration is a phenomenon where it takes a longer amount of time to cover same distance.If you draw a line describing a linear deceleration followed by a linear acceleration between 2 bodies of M, the line will be a curve.Therefore there lies the possibility that space itself is flat, and that gravitation is a time dilation phenomenon within the g-field itself that is causing the geodesics that m and light must travel, and as a result space is only appearing to be curved.
Q: What is curving?
Quote from: JeffreyHIt should be possible to create a surface curved in such a way that a ball rolling along it under the influence of gravity will have a constant velocity. The creation of such a surface will be useful in the study of gravitation.This should be possible - the surface would be a straight line (at least in regions small enough where you could consider gravity to be constant).You need to calculate the frictional/aerodynamic/magnetic induction energy losses of the ball rolling at the intended speed.Then place the surface at an angle that just compensates for all of these losses.If you start the ball rolling at the correct speed, it will keep rolling at this speed.It would be less complicated if the experiment were done in a vacuum (air pressure increases much more rapidly than Earth's gravity), and if the ball were non-conductive and non-magnetic (magnetic field intensity varies dramatically at different points on Earth's surface).How would this help the study of gravity?
One way to look at the curvature of space is to add up the angles inside a triangle.....
….....it's not curved in the sense of a bar being bent to one side. It's curved in the scientific sense of spacetime behaving differently from one point to the next.