Message from @the21cat

Discord ID: 607033249201520672


2019-08-03 02:12:02 UTC  

Oooh buoyancy hmmm

2019-08-03 02:12:07 UTC  

^

2019-08-03 02:12:11 UTC  

Things denser than air go down

2019-08-03 02:12:15 UTC  

Yeah air is matter just like anything else

2019-08-03 02:12:25 UTC  

So what holds air in place

2019-08-03 02:12:30 UTC  

Helium

2019-08-03 02:12:30 UTC  

some flat earthers say we live in a dome if you didn't already know

2019-08-03 02:12:39 UTC  

Oh right

2019-08-03 02:12:40 UTC  

“Things denser than air go down”

2019-08-03 02:12:40 UTC  

Gravity

2019-08-03 02:12:41 UTC  

<:flatearth:564527756180979724>

2019-08-03 02:12:42 UTC  

Helium

2019-08-03 02:12:52 UTC  
2019-08-03 02:13:00 UTC  

Wait, but didn't answer my question earlier: now that you know how those 2 objects move, how can you prove that they attracted each other?

2019-08-03 02:13:09 UTC  

Earth is not flat

2019-08-03 02:13:09 UTC  

Wouldn't helium just float away? Helium doesn't really have an attribute to hold things dow though.

2019-08-03 02:13:11 UTC  

Edillon#5994 LANGUAGE!!!

2019-08-03 02:13:16 UTC  

Wait I’m stupid

2019-08-03 02:13:19 UTC  

@Edillon I typed too fast, I re edited

2019-08-03 02:13:21 UTC  

Yeah I mixed it up

2019-08-03 02:13:24 UTC  

Cavendish experiment

2019-08-03 02:13:25 UTC  

It also opens up a new point

2019-08-03 02:13:31 UTC  

Plus several others

2019-08-03 02:13:45 UTC  

If helium holds air in place what holds helium in place?

2019-08-03 02:13:51 UTC  

Because cavendish proved nothing am I right @the21cat

2019-08-03 02:14:01 UTC  

Ideally you’d have chosen two relatively isolated bodies and just analyze the forces acting on them and try to trace a source for each one

2019-08-03 02:14:24 UTC  

Apparently objects oscillate because of wind

2019-08-03 02:14:33 UTC  

lol

2019-08-03 02:14:36 UTC  

Oh boy is wind fake now too

2019-08-03 02:14:42 UTC  

If you know what i mean

2019-08-03 02:14:44 UTC  

@Umwhat if we live in a dome then what would explain air being denser to the bottom of the dome compared to the top? Or does diffusion not exist in the dome model?

2019-08-03 02:14:45 UTC  

Yeah

2019-08-03 02:14:49 UTC  

There go my plans of flying a kite

2019-08-03 02:15:09 UTC  

If we live in a dome why does stuff go past the atmosphere

2019-08-03 02:15:13 UTC  

I don't necesarilly ascribe to the dome model myself but I am keeping my options open

2019-08-03 02:15:14 UTC  

The magical force of downward bouyancy

2019-08-03 02:15:14 UTC  

Also there are lots of gases denser than air so we’d all suffocate at the bottom

2019-08-03 02:15:28 UTC  

^

2019-08-03 02:15:40 UTC  

Well actually air is pretty homogenous mixture so maybe we wouldn’t suffocate

2019-08-03 02:15:43 UTC  

are you guys a lot of flat earthers or globe people or is this a healthy mix

2019-08-03 02:15:44 UTC  

@Umwhat of course you don't. Sorry if I implied that you do, im just asking questions because I'm genuinely curious.