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That (how Newton considered the problem) would be quite relevant to this discussion, especially given the way the question was framed.
Has my post been deleted, and Paul's?
If an object within a shell has no gravitational effect on any object within it, surely that is from the point of view of the outside Observer? One would assume that the shell would indeed have gravitational attraction, if the she'll where 100, 000km thick and 10 million in diameter?
I don't recall Newton ever saying that gravity was the gradient of a potential. It is just the force that a unit mass would experience when it is put somewhere.
I don't recall Newton ever saying that gravity was the gradient of a potential.
It is just the force that a unit mass would experience when it is put somewhere.
Anyway, just to be clear, what you're suggesting is the following:A particle in the interior of a shell experiences no force due to gravity from the material of that shell. That holds for shells of some finite thickness (assuming the usual things like spherical symmetry). However, when that shell is so thick that it's of unbounded extent, the result may not hold.
If you insert an arbitrary point mass in an infinite homogeneous medium, the barycenter is the point mass itself!
I see, so it is gravitational potential within the shell, the "net gravitational force?? The spherically symmetrical shell being uniform in density.
The [force] vector has magnitude GMm/r2 and direction toward the barycenter of the masses. In the absence of a barycenter it has no direction.
Force per unit mass is acceleration, so it would be an acceleration field.
Can you think of a case (with finite mass) where it (gravity being the gradient of a potential function) isn't so?
This is seen in cosmology: there is the Dipole repeller and the lesser know Cold Spot repeller...... (etc.)
Another thought ... does this give rise to ponderances of gravitational control and even anti gravittational understanding?
You can keep doing this (just adding up individual potentials), so in the general case, you can always identify a suitable potential function for any finite number of masses.
The absurdity of trying to express this is one of my pieces of evidence against models with flowing time.