Message from @Jazz

Discord ID: 612615277271580712


2019-08-18 11:51:16 UTC  
2019-08-18 11:51:27 UTC  

next question

2019-08-18 11:51:43 UTC  

ok first of all place a dictionary and balance it
feels sort of heavy, right?

then take it out

open your storage and pull out a rice sack those rice farmers make

**put it on your head**

2019-08-18 11:51:46 UTC  

@kino okay.... explain how density explains to us why things accelerating downwards?

2019-08-18 11:52:03 UTC  

did you see the density tower i posted earlier

2019-08-18 11:52:13 UTC  

simply put

2019-08-18 11:52:23 UTC  

@kino yes, it doesn't explains why objects accelerating downwards...

2019-08-18 11:52:40 UTC  

Ask if gravity is real, don't ask if gravity is a proportional force

2019-08-18 11:52:52 UTC  

apples fall because they are more dense than the surrounding medium ( air). helium balloons rise because they are less dense than the surrounding medium (air)

2019-08-18 11:52:57 UTC  

its the surrounding medium that matters

2019-08-18 11:52:58 UTC  

@kino They should've just fall in consent speed

2019-08-18 11:53:01 UTC  

@ShadoW (D.F.J) It's a constant but the reason things accelerate faster is because they are denser

2019-08-18 11:53:06 UTC  

**oh god**

2019-08-18 11:53:17 UTC  

boyant force is caused by the pressure gradient of thesurounding fluid

2019-08-18 11:53:23 UTC  

^

2019-08-18 11:53:28 UTC  

Explained before, try something else.

2019-08-18 11:53:41 UTC  

if you forgot

nice

2019-08-18 11:53:57 UTC  

@rivenator12113 what do you mean... how that even makes them accelerate?

2019-08-18 11:54:02 UTC  

ask for explanation instead.of saying you disagree

2019-08-18 11:54:22 UTC  

Mr. Dover.

2019-08-18 11:54:23 UTC  

Eh if there wasn't air resistance everything accelerates at the same speed?

2019-08-18 11:54:25 UTC  

@rivenator12113 apple is denser than air... so it would fall, right? but what makes it accelerate...

2019-08-18 11:54:31 UTC  

Are you still responding?

2019-08-18 11:54:37 UTC  

@ShadoW (D.F.J) If you aren't in a vacuum, the reason things accelerate down faster than others is because of their density.

2019-08-18 11:54:46 UTC  

**@kino.exe has stopped working.**

2019-08-18 11:54:52 UTC  

To ask for a.difrent explanation would be asking for a difrent idea completely
We wouldn't be supporting the claim

2019-08-18 11:54:55 UTC  

@rivenator12113 everything accelerates at the same speed in a vacuum

2019-08-18 11:54:57 UTC  

hes out

2019-08-18 11:55:14 UTC  

lmao chill

2019-08-18 11:55:20 UTC  

brb

2019-08-18 11:55:22 UTC  

oh youre still here

2019-08-18 11:55:24 UTC  
2019-08-18 11:55:27 UTC  

@Kenny what do you want?

2019-08-18 11:55:50 UTC  

are you gonna say there is something wrong with my density explanation?

2019-08-18 11:56:23 UTC  

Dilligaf

2019-08-18 11:56:24 UTC  

@Σ5 @Kenny both of you only claim after after without providing any hard evidence

2019-08-18 11:56:32 UTC  

@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...

2019-08-18 11:56:33 UTC  

lucas chill

2019-08-18 11:56:34 UTC  

give me physical demonstrations for any of your claims

2019-08-18 11:56:44 UTC  

@kino you too fam

2019-08-18 11:56:46 UTC  

Well I was wondering, why does something fall down if it has higher density? Not up, left but down? @kino