Gravity acts on mass and only acts on mass, without mass, there is no gravitational effect.
What about when light bends around the sun?
Gravity acts on mass and only acts on mass, without mass, there is no gravitational effect.
Irregardless, when you start delving into the " particles" and "virtual photons", i wonder if you might even perhaps define those ?
-seasmith
Again, i like the table of "System Analogies" (are you an/the author ?).
One naturally wonders how and why though, on the fundamental quantum level referenced by your formula:"a", as in the fine structure constant. -querious
voltage-current/velocity-force and current-voltage/velocity-force equivalencies may both be valid?
querious wrote:What about when light bends around the sun?
Why is Equivalence Principle incorrect? You state it, but do nothing to support or explain this statement. Are you saying someone in Einstein's theoretical spaceship WOULD be able to tell the difference between a 1g acceleration up due to an engine and a 1g acceleration down due to gravity? How and why?
wiki wrote:"Any principle of relativity prescribes a symmetry in natural law: that is, the laws must look the same to one observer as they do to another."
Michael V wrote:querious,querious wrote:What about when light bends around the sun?
Are you suggesting that light does not have mass?
Michael
Protons have a significant gravitational effect and so they attract, but only to the point of proximity that repulsive charge emission will allow. In this respect they may be considered positive.
Michael V wrote:Gravity as magic or as a causeless geometrical curvature of nothing with no inertial motion inherent in the mathematical construction of said imagined curvature of nothing might be equivalent. Gravity with a physical cause would not be equivalent.
querious wrote:Einstein was able to compute the perihelion of Mercury
querious wrote:the right amount of deflection of starlight around the sun
querious wrote:(TWICE what Newtonian gravity alone would predict)
querious wrote:or even more amazing, predicting the results of the Pound-Rebka experiment
F is not the same as g, what are you talking about? g is an acceleration, g is the same as a.
So its a mathematical fudge of convenience that is entirely the opposite of the physical process.
Michael
You do realise that a gravity well would only accelerate you at 1g at one specific distance (i.e. value of r). Acceleration in a gravity well increases with decreasing distance, so it is not a constant acceleration. Obviously the equivalence scenario assumes a rocket's ability to simulate this, but I thought it might be worth mentioning.
No, I don't suppose a poor pathetic human would easily tell the difference. Gravity is caused by a random particle field - there is no other possible explanation.
As such, there is a difference in the application of accelerative force: a rocket pushing the spaceship relies on the structural integrity of the ship's construction to convey force to the entire spaceship; a gravity well is pushing every single sub-atomic particle as a separate entity. There is are an inertial difference. In a gravity well the contents of the spaceship are all being separately accelerated by the field - the accelerative force is coming directly from the field in which each and every part of the spaceship is travelling.
Gravity as magic or as a causeless geometrical curvature of nothing with no inertial motion inherent in the mathematical construction of said imagined curvature of nothing might be equivalent. Gravity with a physical cause would not be equivalent.
wiki wrote:"Any principle of relativity prescribes a symmetry in natural law: that is, the laws must look the same to one observer as they do to another."
Why would anyone ever believe this to be true? What have "observers" got to do with the operation of the universe? How incredibly foolish.
querious wrote:
Wikipedia has a decent intro to virtual particles... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_particle
. Charge can't be momentum AND displacement at the same time; in reality, it's one or the other.
I've wondered the same thing for many years. I personally am convinced it's momentum.
definite quantities for mass (leptons), velocity (c), angular momentum (h). The obvious fundamental quantity missing from the list is momentum (Q). By the way: h=mvr, and h=charge x mag. flux.
Momentum, force and energy are all defined by mass (and velocity). querious
Michael V wrote:Protons have a significant gravitational effect and so they attract, but only to the point of proximity that repulsive charge emission will allow. In this respect they may be considered positive.
and...
The most dense atomic material is Osmium at 22,570 kg m-3 . The density of a proton is 584,077,213,866,672,000 kg m-3 and neutron density 292,373,784,320,375,000 kg m-3. The strong force is gravity - the gravitational effect between nucleons.
Michael
. Charge can't be momentum AND displacement at the same time; in reality, it's one or the other.
Didn't say simultaneously.
Momentum, force and energy are all defined by mass (and velocity). querious
Want to give your h=charge x mag. flux" some transparency?
querious wrote:Assuming a separation of 2 proton radii, the gravitational attractive force between 2 protons is only about 6 X 10^-35 N, while the repulsive electrical force is about 75 N.
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