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Quote from: alancalverd on 28/05/2019 10:17:35You must abandon the obsession with "limited range"Quote from: Yahya A.Sharif on 28/05/2019 09:01:39Just one question I want an answer for:For a rotating object or God suddenly increased sun's mass, the influence of gravity reach us with a delay .How to explain this phenomenon without the idea of a limited range extending with the speed of light c?
You must abandon the obsession with "limited range"
Just one question I want an answer for:For a rotating object or God suddenly increased sun's mass, the influence of gravity reach us with a delay .How to explain this phenomenon without the idea of a limited range extending with the speed of light c?
Mass cannot be created, so there is no question to answer.
E = mc2. Mass is created, e.g. by pair production, and destroyed, e.g. in nuclear fission, every day. Big fusion reactors like the sun lose huge quantities of mass all the time, so the net gravitational field of the universe is decreasing.
why should gravity have a limited range?
Quote from: Halc on 28/05/2019 12:41:09Mass cannot be created, so there is no question to answer. E = mc2. Mass is created, e.g. by pair production, and destroyed, e.g. in nuclear fission, every day. Big fusion reactors like the sun lose huge quantities of mass all the time, so the net gravitational field of the universe is decreasing.
The conservation of mass only holds approximately and is considered part of a series of assumptions coming from classical mechanics. The law has to be modified to comply with the laws of quantum mechanics and special relativity under the principle of mass-energy equivalence, which states that energy and mass form one conserved quantity. For very energetic systems the conservation of mass-only is shown not to hold, as is the case in nuclear reactions and particle-antiparticle annihilation in particle physics.
Rinse and repeat as often as you'd like and you'd have a source of infinite energy.
Because the gravity of the energy of a rotating object doesn't reach some places in the universe " equals zero , is not available there , etc" and that is exactly the definition of a limited range.
Suppose there is a planet 3E^8 meters away from us , this planet rotates to create new gravity
after 0.5 seconds its gravity range will be 1.5E^8 that means every object inside its range will be affected by its gravity and that according to the inverse squared law, and every object outside its range won't be affected by its gravity including us, we are out of range.
If gravity propagate with c,
but that mass was already there in the form of whatever energy was used to fuel this pair production.
@Halc - I dont think Crookes radiometer is driven by light momentum transfer. It doesnt go round in a hard vacuum, needs some air molecules.
Gravity has nothing to do with rotation. It is a function of mass only.
@Halc - I don’t think Crookes radiometer is driven by light momentum transfer. It doesn’t go round in a hard vacuum, needs some air molecules.
What do you mean by "available"?It doesn't make sense in English to say "gravity is available everywhere".
Quote from: Bored chemist on 28/05/2019 12:16:26What do you mean by "available"?It doesn't make sense in English to say "gravity is available everywhere".
Quote from: Colin2B on 28/05/2019 15:02:43@Halc - I dont think Crookes radiometer is driven by light momentum transfer. It doesnt go round in a hard vacuum, needs some air molecules.Actually it does, but the other way round!
If space-time is infinite ,how gravity extends to infinity? we know infinity is unreachable because it continues forever and no-one reach a finite point.How gravity extends to infinite distances while infinity is unreachable? how gravity bends and curve space-time everywhere while space time end is unreachable? for gravity to bend space-time everywhere it should reach its end , how gravity bends space-time end while this end is unreachable?
Quote from: Colin2B on 28/05/2019 15:02:43@Halc - I don’t think Crookes radiometer is driven by light momentum transfer. It doesn’t go round in a hard vacuum, needs some air molecules.Actually it does, but the other way round!