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Everything posted by awaterpon
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Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Hi Ghideon Thanks for following my idea, Yes I'm using speed instead of velocity the direction is not important whether towards the center or outwards the center of mass, acceleration is just changing in speed v with respect to time t if it is towards or outwards the center it would take effect "gravity change" if it is not it won't take effect.for instance an object at motion in a perfect circle around the earth its gravity won't change unless it changes distance r with some speed v whether inward or outward this object is supposed to have the largest gravity value" being at stationary" although in fact it is accelerating inwards The effective direction is outwards or inwards center so elliptical motion of planets will change its gravity but that will not stop planets being in their orbitals I think increment in v decreases gravity since an object will try to ruin connection between space and matter when at motion -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
v is a variable quantity just like r it is the calculations for gravity for a moving object at speed v. if v is zero then the quantity vt/cT will equal zero in such case gravity for an object at stationary is the largest amount ever while v increases gravity decreases a little bit . t=0 only when v=0 , we start to measure t at object beginning of motion . Anyway gravity decreases with time t as well as it decreases with speed v. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
No the quantity vt/cT is is always less than or equal to 1 t is measured after or exactly at mass existence so t will never be greater than T if so and v is always less than or equal to c then vt/cT is always less than or equal to 1. In such case " vt is greater than cT " masses will be out of range and gravity" mathematically " is supposed to equal negative but the eqaution won't apply for masses out of range and negative gravity doesn't exist. Notice I didn't consider the other mass range since Inside range means both masses are inside each other's range or at least one is inside the other's range The force between masses is mutual one mass attract another mass with a force the other mass attracts with the same force. each mass attracts with its own force using its own range and this force is mutual .Force is propotional with mass M and mass m. Mathematically and according to my equation exceeding the range edge or zero gravity means negative. That also validate my equation. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
My equation is the same as Newton's gravitional equation multiplied by this quantity: (1-vt/cT) in which: vt : is the same as r represented by speed v of object and time t It is represented so because we have only two options for two masses whether masses are in each others' range then an object can't exceed range since it can't move with v faster than light or they are out of range then the equation won't work anyway. c : is the speed of light. T : is the time measured since the mass came from nowhere cT: is the changeable range. According to the equation both range cT goes to infinity and distance vt goes to infinity. According to the equation as range increases or as time time T increases gravity in general increases a little bit according to the equation because there would be more space curved behinde the mass. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Thanks Ghideon .I read it but I didn't get your point . I'll try to derive an equation from the above one. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Wikipedia " In physics and chemistry, the law of conservation of energy states that the total energy of an isolated system remains constant" However energy in the whole universe is being created continuously " infinite mass/energy" and we can somehow add this energy to the system infinitely. Doesn't that mean the system has become a perpetual motion machine creating energy from nothing ? This system is part of the unviverse . "This law means that energy can neither be created nor destroyed" While according to infinite universe , energy is already being created from nothing " infnite mass/energy in the universe" -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
If the entire universe is infinite then total energy on universe is infinite " mass-energy is infinite " then the law of energy conservation is wrong and can't be applied. There should be a finite amount of energy for the system" universe" no more energy is created or added. if energy can't be created , according to infinite universe and mathematically it's already being created since infinity continuse to multiply and increase to " infinity". -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Your answer is not detailed . could you you explain more? how to apply infinite space-time to finite observable universe? -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Infinity is unreachable : in time in distance in spreading in mass by mathematics it is clear So how there should be gravity available at infinity if it is unreachable? You say if but there is not evidence that the universe is infinite. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
You say it's necessary for me to be right that matter came from no where , so what? we know energy is conservative in this universe but we don't know what was before the big bang"the beginning of this unviverse" My idea is not based on the non-existence of matter at some moment but in the unlogical Newtonian view of infinite gravity. So I don't need to present evidence that mass came from nowhere .If the idea that mass came from nowhere is part of my concept then OK noone can prove it didn't came from nowhere and no one has evidence that it is there always. So do matter exist in the past back to infinite time ? this will be another "infinity" wrong idea. It is simple nothing goes with infinity speed nothing weighs infinity nothing spend infinity time nothing spread to infinity distance nothing reaches infinity no other universes will fill the infinity. There is nothing in the universe is infinite and will never be . space and time are not the universe . the are the place in which any possible universe might exist and function so they are infinite " although some scientists say space and time are finite but some say they are infinite and I agree with those who say they are infinite." -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
No one knows what was before the big bang. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Guys you mistunderstand me.Gravitional waves and gravity propagation are standard physics but I added that it has a LIMITED RANGE this range is extendable with speed c. Speed c is the common factor for all these concepts that doesn't mean I' m repeating science @swansont understood me well I need now some math for it so that it is complete and great theory. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
I don't know the mathematics about space-time curvature , what mathematics might be if we add that space time curvature spread out with c ? any ideas? -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Honestly I'm merely an engineering student so I will just leave it Have come to your mind any math or details about it? Thanks, -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Does that mean what I proposed won't be accepted in any way? -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
My idea is space-time curvature spreads out with c . mass motion " accelerated one" causes changes in space-time curvature places making new curvatures in space-time these new curvatures spread out with c in form of waves that proves space curvature spreads out with c. Gravitational waves are standard physics but what I proposed is not. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Gravitational waves are a proof for my discovery The place in which the space-time is curved changes to another place when the mass accelerates a new space-time curvature happens at this new place then this new curvature or gravity spread in form of waves with the speed of light c. Gravitational waves propagate with the speed of light c. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Space and time are infinite since they are fundamental -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
The idea of infinity is always wrong.They are newtonian thoughts, things like Infinite speed of objects , infinite speed of gravity and gravity is everywhere and available at infinity.They are all Newton's thoughts I presented a new solution based on GR and violating Newton thoughts of infinite extend of gravity , Gravity being everywhere untill infinity is a Newtonian thought left unchanged by GR what I did is completing GR without violating any part of it and without violating modern physics. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
don't close the thread please.I meant it is a good representation for my idea -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
No but beautiful. My idea is something like this thanks studiot -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
Think of an object close to a range limit by one meter , now think of moving this object away from mass towards the range end the object can't reach the limit point since it can't move faster than light " range is extendable with c" So in fact there is not a sudden step so that force drop to zero , the sudden change is only mathematically. The space-time is curved at the limit point by a degree but has no any curvature after that point, however since the curving process continues there is not a sudden drop in space curvature since it continues -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
By displacing space-time. Think of blowing a balloon inside water container it would displace water and makes water have the same shape of the balloon "bend". -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
But there is not an idea of magnetism spreading out? The delay in fact is due to to spreading of magnetic field with speed of light c. -
Gravity is limited to a range extendable with the speed of light c
awaterpon replied to awaterpon's topic in Speculations
That mass existed from nothing and started to curve space-time from zero range to its today ranges for each mass. That what I meant by: "The existence of mass causes none-existence in space-time cause space-time to displace and bend"