Message from @Syntax

Discord ID: 564191189931130900


2019-04-06 20:51:15 UTC  

Hmm
sorry

2019-04-06 20:51:17 UTC  

The woman is accelerating

2019-04-06 20:51:22 UTC  

But I don't see any mass pushing that woman

2019-04-06 20:51:24 UTC  

Isn't that just drag, how does that relate to gravity

2019-04-06 20:51:24 UTC  

Must be fake

2019-04-06 20:51:28 UTC  

Same logic

2019-04-06 20:51:36 UTC  

If you have a powerful enough fan underneath you, you will accelerate upwards

2019-04-06 20:52:05 UTC  

@Hamburger Guy He threatened to shut us down, so we don't have a choice.

2019-04-06 20:52:10 UTC  

Cause = big fan blowing air
Effect = acceleration

2019-04-06 20:52:31 UTC  

Yep, air particles can apply force as well.

2019-04-06 20:52:38 UTC  

>>mute 542838501087903745

2019-04-06 20:52:39 UTC  

<:vSuccess:390202497827864597> Successfully muted **Ivan Pavlovich**#1596

2019-04-06 20:52:42 UTC  

you were warned

2019-04-06 20:52:56 UTC  

Uh

2019-04-06 20:53:04 UTC  

see keeps going back to forces again

2019-04-06 20:53:08 UTC  

I'm talkign about acceleration

2019-04-06 20:53:16 UTC  

This seems a lot like silencing people that are bringing up genuine points

2019-04-06 20:53:52 UTC  

you mean he was shown you don't need a force to create an acceleration with light then tried to shift the goal posts then agreed light has no mass

2019-04-06 20:53:59 UTC  

These are laws of acceleration, not laws of force

2019-04-06 20:54:03 UTC  

Mass, Force and acceleration are all linked by the same equation
A question including acceleration will often include, you need to understand this

2019-04-06 20:54:21 UTC  

So your point doesn't stand

2019-04-06 20:54:33 UTC  

@Syntax Alright then show me please how a massless beam of light can have a force
9. WAVE PROPULSION: https://imgur.com/BOi8zNF

2019-04-06 20:54:51 UTC  

Right

2019-04-06 20:54:54 UTC  

you can if the wall is made of glass!

2019-04-06 20:55:01 UTC  

So if you shine a laser through a glass wall

2019-04-06 20:55:11 UTC  

The light will defract if it is at an angle

2019-04-06 20:56:31 UTC  

The light collides with the glass first at one part of the beam, causing a change in direction as there is some kind of resisting force
This force opposes the acceleration of the light
So the light accelerates slower on one part, and then angles based on the refraction index
The light will decelerate due to glass

2019-04-06 20:56:50 UTC  

So some kind of force must be resisting the light

2019-04-06 20:57:20 UTC  

And to have a resisting force like that, the light must have a force acting against the glass

2019-04-06 20:58:56 UTC  

Probably got some terms wrong in my explanation

2019-04-06 20:59:04 UTC  

But this what I've been taught

2019-04-06 20:59:47 UTC  

Usually it's written as F = ma
a=F/m is a rearrangement

2019-04-06 21:10:59 UTC  

@SeekingTruth then in which case light must have mass to have mass times acceleration to cause the force observed here
9. WAVE PROPULSION: https://imgur.com/BOi8zNF

2019-04-06 21:11:10 UTC  

@SeekingTruth May I please see your WEIGHT of light please

2019-04-06 21:11:25 UTC  

Ha

2019-04-06 21:11:38 UTC  

Weight can't even exist without gravity, which I doubt you even believe in

2019-04-06 21:12:22 UTC  

@Syntax Funny that because Archimedes WEIGHED things almost 2000 years before gravity was invented

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/538929818834698260/564195720740208640/DeepinScreenshot_select-area_20190315045859.png

2019-04-06 21:12:38 UTC  

Buoyancy works off of weight

2019-04-06 21:13:04 UTC  

Sorry I want @SeekingTruth to first show me how light has mass with which to hold a force

2019-04-06 21:13:06 UTC  

You actually need to apply calculations to convert that to mass if you want to use it in other equations related to force

2019-04-06 21:13:08 UTC  

Afterall