Message from @Magical Sheep

Discord ID: 575116012060540968


2019-05-07 00:22:10 UTC  

nope

2019-05-07 00:22:20 UTC  

Which would either be really light or heavy air

2019-05-07 00:22:21 UTC  

that's basic physics but ok

2019-05-07 00:22:34 UTC  

no it aint lol

2019-05-07 00:22:48 UTC  

We would essentially be breathing water it self if it got heavy enough (by weight I mean)

2019-05-07 00:23:05 UTC  

Or mass idfk lol

2019-05-07 00:23:12 UTC  

basic physics about gas properties is that gas expands and evens out in a container/containement object

2019-05-07 00:23:32 UTC  

not if it's as huge as earth

2019-05-07 00:23:33 UTC  

well thats one of its properties

2019-05-07 00:23:40 UTC  

nah

2019-05-07 00:23:57 UTC  

if it's as huge as the earth, that'd happen cuz gravity doesn't exist right?

2019-05-07 00:24:03 UTC  

Earths dome in this case would still be a container no matter the scale

2019-05-07 00:24:16 UTC  

^^^

2019-05-07 00:24:21 UTC  

the "pressure" (airpressure/s) is basically most of what "gravity" really is

2019-05-07 00:24:29 UTC  

Not exactly

2019-05-07 00:24:35 UTC  

so pressure is apparently gravity

2019-05-07 00:24:43 UTC  

weird flex but ok

2019-05-07 00:24:54 UTC  

Temperature, pressure, mass, density, bouyancy, electromagnetism
Dialectric acceleration <:BigSmiles:556070613224259594> boom

2019-05-07 00:24:56 UTC  

is there any real proof of atmospheric life other than sketchy government probes?

2019-05-07 00:25:20 UTC  

We are an example of atmospheric life actually

2019-05-07 00:25:42 UTC  

oh that's true

2019-05-07 00:25:49 UTC  

If we say that buoyancy is a force that allows objects to float on a dense substance, I don’t see how it explains object acceleration to the ground. Objects buoying on the surface are pushed up by the density of the substance, applying a constant force in order to recover its original form. When you squeeze a balloon, it exerts a force opposite to the one you apply on it. It can also work the other way around, meaning that denser objects will force their way through lighter objects. However, there are 2 forces involved when the direction is constant, and the other is gravity, that gives the vector for the acceleration!

2019-05-07 00:25:51 UTC  

I mean high-altitude

2019-05-07 00:26:04 UTC  

atmospheric bacterial life exists

2019-05-07 00:26:14 UTC  

Well small organisms exist but in small quantity

2019-05-07 00:26:45 UTC  

We just live closer to the earth cause it’s more habitable such as our need for water, food, shelter, etc.

2019-05-07 00:26:56 UTC  

Gravity?

-- The Encyclopedia Britannica tells us that .. _“The Law of Gravitation is unique among the laws of nature, not only for its wide generality, taking the whole universe into its scope, but in the fact that, so far as is yet known, it is absolutely unmodified by any condition or cause whatever.”_ ...... Here again we observe that the nature of gravitation is not really defined at all ; we are told that masses of matter tend toward each other, but no reason is given why they do so, or should do so ; while to say that _“it is absolutely unmodified by any condition or cause whatever ”_ is one of the most unscientific statements possible to make. There is not any thing or force in the (so-called) 'universe' that is absolute, no thing that goes its own way and 'does-what-it-will' without regard to other forces or things

2019-05-07 00:26:59 UTC  

.
Again, gravitation is spoken of as a pull, an agent of attraction, or rather a (dielectric acceleration), that robs weight of its meaning, something that brings all terrestrial things down to earth while at the same time it keeps the heavenly bodies in their places ("locked" so-to-speak), and prevents them falling toward each other or apart. It is not natural; and the theory is scientifically unsound. \

2019-05-07 00:27:12 UTC  

And oxygen is more scarce on higher levels of a round earth

2019-05-07 00:27:18 UTC  

>>>> Temperature, pressure, mass, density, bouyancy, electromagnetism
Dialectric acceleration

2019-05-07 00:27:24 UTC  

weight cannot exist without gravity

2019-05-07 00:27:38 UTC  

Weight without gravity is just mass

2019-05-07 00:27:46 UTC  

mhm

2019-05-07 00:28:25 UTC  

idek if you have proof against that but ok

2019-05-07 00:29:02 UTC  

What does *gravity* mean here?

2019-05-07 00:29:48 UTC  

Gravity, being the force of large amounts of mass pulling other smaller amounts of mass towards itself

2019-05-07 00:30:30 UTC  

So weight, cannot exist without *Gravity, being the force of large amounts of mass pulling other smaller amounts of mass towards itself*?

2019-05-07 00:30:56 UTC  

Basically force x mass = weight

2019-05-07 00:31:32 UTC  

@✧Mike Flatbird (Mike Blackbird)✧ have you realized that when you release a balloon with helium in the atmosphere that it generally goes straight up and not like at a 45 degree angle?

2019-05-07 00:31:50 UTC  

@bob. hopefully I didn’t mess up the equation?

2019-05-07 00:31:56 UTC  

if you throw the balloon, it'd still go upwards