Moderators: Liteninbolt, Staff
If we look at space-time as a surface upon which everything sits, the distortion of such a surface would result in a tendency to cause objects which sit on it to congeal.
Uniqor wrote:Gravity, attraction between masses.
Sex, attraction between genders.
Magnetisim, attraction between poles.
Friendship, attraction between personalities.
Attraction, a principle law of the universe.
Future Man wrote:If we look at space-time as a surface upon which everything sits, the distortion of such a surface would result in a tendency to cause objects which sit on it to congeal.
exactly, except eintein had no idea what this 'surface' was.
whats a thing that fills three dimensional space and has enough enerby in a cubic meter to boil all of the oceans in the world?
the zero point field is it and its one thing we know nothing about on large scales.
i need to invent a machine soon.. any ideas? i think i want it to.. measure.. the zero point field. and its effect on the entire planet. quickly.
Future Man wrote:i think youve got your string theory and your relativity jumbled up.
the imperceptible curvy dimensions are impreceptible for geometric reasons, not einsteins 'space-time curvature'. for example, imagine the 3d universe is the surface of a 4d sphere in the same way that a 2d universe could exist on the surface of a 3d sphere. the people in flatland would never know there was a 3rd dimension, but if they went in a straight line they would end up back where they started someday, and then would know.
also, imagine a 1d worm inside his 1d hose universe. if he perceives things the mechanical way that we do, then he can only shoot a ball out that hits whatever is in front of him and then bounces back, giving him a 0d time value. like we see the 3d universe with 2d images, he sees his 1d universe with a 0d point value. now imagine anything is smaller than that ball the worm uses to see. that would be the same as something being smaller than the photons we see (or rather, smaller than our smallest basic unit of perception). while inside that '1d' hose, the smaller-than-photon particle can move around in all three dimensions or more and the worm will have no clue what you are talking about.
the 'curvature' described by einstein is really just a product of the bowling ball-trampoline analogy. if you assume that there is a force similar to gravity underneath the trampoline, then yes, a downhill slope on the trampoline wil 'cause' things to go down.
the big misconception here is that the mere fact that the thing is curved creates downward force. no it doesnt. the force of gravity that is assumed to be present underneath is what cretes that force. the fabric being curved allows for unequilibrium which is responded to by the motion we see.
einstein did not define what is the metaphorical equivalent of the force of gravity in the bowling ball trampoline analogy. thats what im trying to do. einstein said 'heres how future mans theory affects the motion of objects'. the big thing he discovered was that time is also ambiguously affected by gravity. thats all general relativity adds up to as far as i can see.
this is the thing that we observe. have we ever observed what creates this effect?The bowling ball always wants to reach the lowest energy state
Future Man wrote:well what made the motion? and is there any other form this motion takes besides gravity?
Future Man wrote:well whatever you say about the 'fabric of space time' what is that thing?
is it necesarily impossible for us to see what the fabric is?
you guys are just reciting what youve heard. einstein has no idea what the fabric is, only that it is something.this is the thing that we observe. have we ever observed what creates this effect?The bowling ball always wants to reach the lowest energy state
the big bang made the motion presumably, but regaurdless of what made it, you have to agree that motion is inevitable. Even at absolute zero particles are still moving. There is not a single known thing in the universe which does not move, so it is safe to assume that there is motion. What made or is making the motion is irrelevant to my point.
The more objects and mass there are, the more the disruption of equilibrium of (something's) density, thus the more the objects are pulled and attracted to one another.
i would describe this as matter attracting the activity of the zpf particles by giving them something to bump around into, thus diverting their path and bouncing them somewhere they would not have otherwise gone. the direction they would have chosen to go would be the one the keeps the larger system in equilibrium, and the presence of mass disrupts it.If space is more dense around an object, then it makes sense to hypothesize that extra density results in a distortion in the surface, and therefore an imbalance as well. That imbalance could be gravity.
Mass tells space how to curve, and space tells mass how to move.
Future Man wrote:and gravitons are stupid, wheres one piece of non math evidence for their existence
Math has enabled us to develop quantum mechanics and relativity. Both fields have made predictions which seemed completely ridiculous
The assumption that it exists allows the theory to offer an explanation for many phenomena that HAVE been experimentally confirmed.
repulsion is the anti-attraction - it is the "attraction" between two like bodies.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests