quantumcrack Posted October 4, 2005 Posted October 4, 2005 If spacetime is straight on mondays and curved on sundays, than it must affect the earth then. Yet, spacetime would be affected by the earths rotation on an X-axis. every planet leaves an indentation in Spacetime, but i think that spacetime could surround every single micrometer of 3D matter in the cosmos. How does this sound?? I have a little science club, if you want to join and help the search for knowledge, plz give your e-mail address. Don't worry, it's just to keep in contact!!
quantumcrack Posted October 5, 2005 Author Posted October 5, 2005 I am only in grade school and i know this. you should know what i mean, but i appreciate the effort.
gib65 Posted October 5, 2005 Posted October 5, 2005 I should hope you know that you're in grade school. I'd hate to be an eighth grader stressing over a university exam I mistakenly think I'm supposed to be cramming for.
Xyph Posted October 5, 2005 Posted October 5, 2005 It sounds like you're thinking of spacetime as some sort of aether...
insane_alien Posted October 5, 2005 Posted October 5, 2005 it seems you have a corrupted veiw of spacetime. cos what you just said makes as much sense as "fish 12ety %£$^$%4548648 fghdyihfoi fish 40+2=eleventy"
quantumcrack Posted October 8, 2005 Author Posted October 8, 2005 i am not an 8th grader, a 7th grader. i am smarter than almost everybody in my grade except for some teachers. Not boasting.
insane_alien Posted October 8, 2005 Posted October 8, 2005 even if that is true you still need coherent(to other people) language in order for us to understand and then answer the question.
JonM Posted October 16, 2005 Posted October 16, 2005 If spacetime is straight on mondays and curved on sundays' date=' than it must affect the earth then. Yet, spacetime would be affected by the earths rotation on an X-axis. every planet leaves an indentation in Spacetime, but i think that spacetime could surround every single micrometer of 3D matter in the cosmos. How does this sound?? I have a little science club, if you want to join and help the search for knowledge, plz give your e-mail address. Don't worry, it's just to keep in contact!![/quote'] I think he is talking about gravity's effect on the spacetime grid... but its not just on the x-axis, it affects the x y and z... And gravity does have an effect on all 3d matter
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