Message from @Teddy

Discord ID: 622549349322194988


2019-09-14 21:45:38 UTC  

because the sun is much farther away

2019-09-14 21:45:45 UTC  

and at the distance from the sun that it is, the earth's pull is stronger

2019-09-14 21:45:50 UTC  

and how much times more massive than earth?

2019-09-14 21:46:02 UTC  

it is much closer to the earth therefore the pull ends up being stronger

2019-09-14 21:46:12 UTC  

you can do the calculation, the sun has a stronger gravitational pull than earth even if it's so far awaay

2019-09-14 21:46:20 UTC  

no it doesn't?

2019-09-14 21:46:46 UTC  

yes it does bro, if it can hold earth why not the moon? the moon is lighter than earth innit?

2019-09-14 21:46:54 UTC  

the escape velocity is over a km/s

2019-09-14 21:47:04 UTC  

the sun just isn't strong enough from that distance

2019-09-14 21:47:22 UTC  

does anyone find it intriguing that they say that its hotter outside of the sun than it is within it or on the surface?

2019-09-14 21:47:26 UTC  

bunch of bolloney meat ballls

2019-09-14 21:47:48 UTC  

yeah

2019-09-14 21:47:49 UTC  

can you send that

2019-09-14 21:48:07 UTC  

i dont have it on hand, i was asking a question

2019-09-14 21:48:09 UTC  

@TheObliterator Bro, do you agree that when you heat an object it loses its magnetic properties?

2019-09-14 21:48:24 UTC  

gravity isn't magnetism

2019-09-14 21:48:28 UTC  

if that's where you're leading with this

2019-09-14 21:48:39 UTC  

the sun isn't metal, and yet it has gravity

2019-09-14 21:48:46 UTC  

🙄

2019-09-14 21:48:51 UTC  

So how come the fkn earth still have the north and south pole when the core is being heated at high temperature? it makes no fookn sense

2019-09-14 21:49:03 UTC  

i did the experiment

2019-09-14 21:49:17 UTC  

can you give evidence for magnetism being negated at high temperatures?

2019-09-14 21:49:17 UTC  

i couldnt attract nor repel when i heated a magnetic metal

2019-09-14 21:49:36 UTC  

bruh

2019-09-14 21:49:53 UTC  

https://www.hsisensing.com/temperature-affect-magnetism/ bro i learned this in high school but i never asked my teacher

2019-09-14 21:50:03 UTC  

innit a good question

2019-09-14 21:50:33 UTC  

@TheObliterator Marie curie's temp?

2019-09-14 21:50:35 UTC  

than what is bro? i was told it was core

2019-09-14 21:50:51 UTC  

it's the lenz's law stuff

2019-09-14 21:50:54 UTC  

Yeah the globe says it's the core

2019-09-14 21:51:02 UTC  

rotating electric current makes a magnet

2019-09-14 21:51:03 UTC  

and vice versa

2019-09-14 21:51:11 UTC  

MATGE

2019-09-14 21:51:12 UTC  

!mute @Itachi

2019-09-14 21:51:13 UTC  

2019-09-14 21:51:13 UTC  

Lenz' law doesn't mean it's not the core

2019-09-14 21:51:32 UTC  

bro this makes no fookn sense @TheObliterator i was told it was the core now u switching on me?

2019-09-14 21:52:27 UTC  

yeah sorry I was looking at a confusing article

2019-09-14 21:52:41 UTC  

but yes, the iron currents make a magnetic field

2019-09-14 21:53:00 UTC  

!unmute @Itachi