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I'm quite impervious to insult, ES - years of jousting with a mad chemist can toughen the hide!
Quote from: jeffreyH on 12/05/2021 19:26:10While you can state F = ma this is not the same as saying F = mg. No force is felt in the second equation.I feel a 185 lb force on my feet when I stand, which is due to F=mg so I have to disagree.
While you can state F = ma this is not the same as saying F = mg. No force is felt in the second equation.
you feel the force because you are not in free fall.
Quote from: jeffreyH link=topic=82271.msg639 hi723#msg639723 date=1621077647 you feel the force because you are not in free fall.I agree and that force can be calculated by F=mg.
I agree and that force can be calculated by F=mg.
So one question that arises out of the last couple of posts is;How does GR explain the acceleration that occurs during free fall without a force being a factor and how this reconciles with Newtons three laws of motion ?
Just to muddy the waters, if gravity was acting on a single elementary particle then you could argue that F = mg would act as a force. Since it is not a composite object.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 16/05/2021 11:39:11Just to muddy the waters, if gravity was acting on a single elementary particle then you could argue that F = mg would act as a force. Since it is not a composite object. Was that a general reply to previous replies? It seems like you are suggesting that every elementary particle needs testing (which could be difficult if you were considering quarks and just wanted to isolate one on its own).
Even if you did test each fundamental particle, are you going test all combinations of those elemantary particles next (which could take a while) or try to invoke some argument about linear superposition of gravitational potential or something?
Proposing that the gravitational pull on a composite particle (e.g. a Carbon atom) is calculated just as a linear sum of the gravitational effects on its components may seem simple but it isn't: What are you going to do about "binding energy"? An atom of carbon has less mass than the sum of its parts, if gravity did pull on the carbon atom just like the sum of pulls on its components then the atom should accelerate slightly faster than g.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 16/05/2021 11:39:11Just to muddy the waters, if gravity was acting on a single elementary particle then you could argue that F = mg would act as a force. Since it is not a composite object. I think I'm a bit lost on who was replying with what, to whom and what it implied, sorry. Not to worry, it happens often and I usually find my way home.