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It is not physically possible to detect a 2ug force in 1797.
Ignoring the incorrect 2μg, it is incumbent on those who find Cavendish's experiment incredible, to explain why it yielded a value of G within 1% of the current best measurements.
Here we have someone from 2019 incapable of understanding technology from 1797!
I'm not sure if it's not that they can't understand but that they actively refuse to.The OP has refused, consistently, to even try to do the maths which shows how it would work.
Show a a 2ug force is measured today in modern physics.
Quote from: Colin2B on 06/05/2019 17:31:14Here we have someone from 2019 incapable of understanding technology from 1797!I'm not sure if it's not that they can't understand but that they actively refuse to.The OP has refused, consistently, to even try to do the maths which shows how it would work.
How far should the beam have moved? is a maths problem.Answer it.
How would you weigh the mass of a penny to 2 ug in 1797?
The fact that Cav is measuring a force of 2 ug has precedence before anything else.
Not physically possible in 1797. Admit it. It does not matter what the angle is if the original force is impossible to measure in 1797.
An angle represents a magnitude in degrees but a force is depicted in Newton or grams.
It is not physically possible to measure a 2ug force in 1797 no matter what method you use.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/tools/lp/Bo/LogicalFallacies/49/Argument-by-Repetition