Message from @Jazz
Discord ID: 612616812177391629
@rivenator12113 no things accelerate at the same speed... 9.8m\s2. in a vacuum as someone said here before, you can put a feather and a 50 Kg ball and they will fall at the same speed...
lucas chill
give me physical demonstrations for any of your claims
Well I was wondering, why does something fall down if it has higher density? Not up, left but down? @kino
dilligaf
Something just having higher density itself does not make it move
what
wait
@ShadoW (D.F.J) I know that but earth isn't a vacuum. We create artificial vacuums.
D.I.L.L.I.G.A.F. DO I LOOK LIKE I GIVE FUC
yes
you responded
so yes, you do give an eff.
@rivenator12113 yeah... but how it's have something to do with the "debate"? i said things accelerates downwards because of Gravity... and density has nothing to do with it, so how relative density is a vailed replacement?
@rivenator12113 yea things fall faster, because they have less air resistance compared to the force. This does not have anything to do with density
Wait. WHO THINKS THE EARTH IS FLAT HERE?
pretty much half the server or something
keeps the server active
@ShadoW (D.F.J) In a vacuum density wouldn't matter, on earth density would influence the acceleration
@rivenator12113 nope... density wouldn't decide if something goes down or up or sideways, density wouldn't make object go faster (accelerate) density is almost meaningless without Gravity...
idk whaat is this chat doing
*lets start all over*
and not ramble like 9 year old adults
@ShadoW (D.F.J) acceleration is just change in speed
Gravity is just a constant, I don't understand why do you use it as argument for why would it fall down. They fooled us well with that word
Density does affect if the object falls faster or not.
Explain?
@rivenator12113 it does not
I can explain if you want
I'm talking on earth
Not in a vacuum
On earth it does not
Alright so you know about force right?
F
You can do this yourself, take something dense and something less dense. The one which is densest will always hit the ground first lol...
@kino things "fall down" because things attracted to the center of mass (our earth center of mass) down for us isn't down for someone else... density isn't capable of saying where an less dense thing will go or more dense thing will go, it working with gravity... Density ALONE is only an amount of matter an object has to its volume.... that's will not decide whether something "falls" or "rise"
@rivenator12113#161 yes that's because something dense usually has less air resistance compared to their weight
@rivenator12113 I'm sorry to say, but your entire claim is busted.
Galileo did it.
@ShadoW (D.F.J) proof of that claim