krimin_killr21 Posted July 26, 2011 Posted July 26, 2011 One of the most fundemental laws of physics is that all things are attracted to one another as described by the equation G=D*M. However on of the less fundemental ramafacations is that the universe if it were to expand as it is now that it would slow and eventually reverse until it reached singularity. The problom is that it is excelerating not slowing. So how might one resolve this? What if there was no gravitey, but only the lack of anti-gravity? An antigravity that takes a percentage of empty space. That if everything else were moving away but you wouldn't it look like you were coming closer together? Wouldn't this solve the dark matter mystery? Who knows. What are your thoughts?
swansont Posted July 26, 2011 Posted July 26, 2011 One of the most fundemental laws of physics is that all things are attracted to one another as described by the equation G=D*M. Which "fundamental law" is this?
ajb Posted July 27, 2011 Posted July 27, 2011 I have no idea what you are talking about, so I cannot vote. Please define your terms and explain further.
imatfaal Posted July 27, 2011 Posted July 27, 2011 ajb - hadn't you heard? all that nonsense about inverse square law was found to be a un-necessary complication
krimin_killr21 Posted August 7, 2011 Author Posted August 7, 2011 Which "fundamental law" is this? The law of gravitation.
ajb Posted August 7, 2011 Posted August 7, 2011 The law of gravitation. You have not presented the law of gravitation (I expect you mean Newton's universal law of gravity, [math]F = G \frac{mM}{r^{2}})[/math] in a way we recognise. G= D*M requires some explanation.
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