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Gravity vs Mass

Valjean

Veteran Member
Premium Member
and science assumes dark energy and dark matter

and God was God of the Dark before He created light
No, science was first resistant to the notions of dark matter and energy, but was forced to accept them when conclusive evidence emerged.
Science doesn't assume. It follows the evidence.
 

Valjean

Veteran Member
Premium Member
Someone had to be First
you are simply denying....He wasn't there in the beginning
Why? and what is "first?"
You're projecting your everyday experience on reality. Reality is counter-intuitive. To our everyday perception it makes no sense and appears impossible.
Yet it is.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
so...…..gravity is a given
in the presence of ANY substance?

What do you mean by the term 'substance'. That sounds Aristotelian, which is going to be a problem when trying to understand modern physics.

Gravity is a given whenever there is matter or energy. If there are 'substances' that don't have energy, then gravity may not be produced from them. I don't know of any, though.
 

Valjean

Veteran Member
Premium Member
oooops.....the science documentary I saw was contrary to that

it is assumed

not proven

the aforementioned items cannot be detected
Nothing outside of mathematics is proven. A great deal exists that can't be seen. Dark matter can be "observed" by its gravitational effects.
Do you have an alternate explanation?
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Yes and no. In a gravitational field any gas will have essentially an exponential drop in concentration as you move up. The coefficient on that exponential is linear in the molecular weight of the molecules in that gas. So small molecules will naturally be distributed higher whether or not there are heavier ones around. And, in fact, each type of molecule finds its distribution independently of the others (well, very close to independently).

Of course, this is focusing only on the thermodynamics and ignoring the fluid flow aspects of the situation.
I had it pegged as atomic mass vs molecular mass.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
I had it pegged as atomic mass vs molecular mass.

Not exactly the most relevant aspect. Molecular mass determines the mass of a mole. Temperature and pressure determine the volume of a mole. The differences in mass in a given volume (the density) determines the buoyant force.

So, if you heat up air, it gets less dense and so the buoyant force is more. You need to heat it up a lot to get it down to the density of, say, helium, so helium will usually give more buoyant force than air.

Where atomic vs molecular masses come in is what constitutes a mole. So, oxygen atoms have a mass of 16 au, so 16 grams per mole. But oxygen *molecules* have two oxygen atoms, so they have a molecular mass of 32 au, or 32 grams per mole. Helium doesn't form molecules (it is chemically inert), but hydrogen does. So, while the atomic mass of hydrogen is 1 au, and that of helium is 4 au, *molecular* hydrogen is 2 au, so has half the density of helium (as opposed to one fourth for atomic hydrogen).
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
and light cannot escape the draw of a black hole

is it that for the mass that light particles have?
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
and do black holes emit energy?.....of any kind
I've heard that they do

but how can that happen if light cannot escape?

just asking
 

Heyo

Veteran Member
and do black holes emit energy?.....of any kind
I've heard that they do

but how can that happen if light cannot escape?

just asking
That theoretical process is known as Hawking radiation - Wikipedia. It is a quantum mechanical process (or rather two processes) that contradict GR.
The first process is theorized for micro Black Holes and involves Heisenbergs Uncertainty principle - Wikipedia. Through the very exact position of a particle within the Black Hole, the momentum can, mathematically, be enough for the particle to escape.
The second occurs when a particle pair is generated through Quantum fluctuation - Wikipedia near the Event horizon - Wikipedia and the massive particle escapes and the particle with negative mass falls into the Black Hole, subtracting from the overall mass.
 

Native

Free Natural Philosopher & Comparative Mythologist
No, science was first resistant to the notions of dark matter and energy, but was forced to accept them when conclusive evidence emerged.
Science doesn't assume. It follows the evidence.
Yes, science was, sort off, forced to accept dark matter when the ASSUMED universal laws of celestial motions around a gravity center was contradicted in galaxies. But instead of revising the laws, science ASSUMED dark matter "to hold the stars inside galaxies" because they otherwise would fly away from the galaxies because of the "abnormal motions".

Standard science failed to analyse the galactic formation and the motions of the stars, and they simply inserted an ASSUMED dark matter in order to fit the starry motions to their former and contradicted equations.

And, as this new ASSUMED dark invention again fits the old (contradicted) equations, they took dark matter to exist as a "conclusive evidence".
.
Of course cosmological science ASSUMES. This is the very basics in all science. They just call it "new theories".
 
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