Message from @Ivan Pavlovich

Discord ID: 564188307722862593


2019-04-06 20:36:33 UTC  

Watch closely

2019-04-06 20:36:39 UTC  

they do not accelerate at the same rate

2019-04-06 20:37:14 UTC  

Ah yes, I've seen this before.

2019-04-06 20:37:15 UTC  

However I would argue the bowling ball and the feather have more similar body density to medium density ratios

2019-04-06 20:37:21 UTC  

in a vacuum

2019-04-06 20:37:29 UTC  

There's this thing called elastic energy.

2019-04-06 20:37:39 UTC  

Nobody's ever observed a perfect vacuum, only ever degrees of parital pressure

2019-04-06 20:38:02 UTC  

Nevertheless archimedes principle is not in violation

2019-04-06 20:38:11 UTC  

You are dropping two very dense objects in a very not dense medium

2019-04-06 20:38:34 UTC  

likewise if you drop a not very dense object in a dense medium such as the aluminium sheet in the container of sulfur hexafluoride, it floats

2019-04-06 20:39:07 UTC  

so before I address the feather, tell me, what provides the downwards force to being with?

2019-04-06 20:40:10 UTC  

force = mass times acceleration, can we deal with the acceleration please?

2019-04-06 20:40:21 UTC  

Yes.

2019-04-06 20:41:10 UTC  

sure so you agree that by changing either the density of the body or changing the density of the medium can cause a change in acceleration even direction of accelration yes?

2019-04-06 20:41:40 UTC  

Yes, a change in net force will change net acceleration.

2019-04-06 20:41:50 UTC  

cause = changing the density of something by attaching helium/hydrogen/deuterium/tritium/helium-3 balloons to ones self.

2019-04-06 20:42:04 UTC  

effect = changing in direction of acceleration

2019-04-06 20:42:06 UTC  

No

2019-04-06 20:42:19 UTC  

well force is a byproduct of acceleration, so I want to talk just about the acceleration please.

2019-04-06 20:42:39 UTC  

Cause: providing upwards force to overcome downwards.

2019-04-06 20:42:54 UTC  

But yes, lets continue

2019-04-06 20:42:57 UTC  

Yeah I'm not interested in forced thank you, I'm talking about sheeple's laws of accelerationism

2019-04-06 20:43:07 UTC  

Lol grabbity forgets to grab helium but somehow makes the atmosphere stick like velcro and prevents it from rushing into a empty space

2019-04-06 20:43:21 UTC  

acceleration is a fundamental component of force

2019-04-06 20:43:30 UTC  

force is not the cause of acceleration

2019-04-06 20:43:34 UTC  

@Hamburger Guy 😂

2019-04-06 20:43:41 UTC  

Try helium in a vacuum.

2019-04-06 20:43:47 UTC  

force is a byproduct of mass and acceleration

2019-04-06 20:43:51 UTC  

Density then

2019-04-06 20:44:28 UTC  

Actually, force IS the cause of acceleration.

2019-04-06 20:44:38 UTC  

9. WAVE PROPULSION: https://imgur.com/BOi8zNF

2019-04-06 20:44:41 UTC  

No it's really not

2019-04-06 20:44:47 UTC  

EM waves have ZERO mass

2019-04-06 20:44:51 UTC  

force is mass times acceleration

2019-04-06 20:44:56 UTC  

no mass yet acceleration occurs

2019-04-06 20:45:03 UTC  

So @Ivan Pavlovich I'm sorry you're wrong

2019-04-06 20:45:16 UTC  

What acceleration?

2019-04-06 20:45:40 UTC  

Do you see the object moving as a result of being shot at with a laser?

2019-04-06 20:45:49 UTC  

lasers emit light or infra red waves

2019-04-06 20:46:08 UTC  

Yeah, waves have energy and they can transfer that.

2019-04-06 20:46:20 UTC  

so it's not a force then is it