Message from @Umwhat
Discord ID: 601599537928208415
what happens if density of surroundings is 0
you mean a vacuum?
you mean like a vacuum?
yeah, i guess why wouldn't denser things fall faster in a vacuum
we can create vacuums on earth even if one believes space to not exist
Evident by centrifuge experiments buoyant forces assume the system is under a force. Thus buoyancy in no way could be thw force downward
Brain cox proved denser items do fall faster in a vacuum
relative density is not exactly just buoyancy tho
and i agree, i think relative density can be a thing but maybe not the cause
Plus in a vacuum things still fall so theres no way it could only be density
i think things fall uniformly
the cause that things fall down
The cause of density would be molecular weight
and interactions between things falling causes relative density. just my opinion
you are assuming they are pulled
i am, and i don't know why they are pulled
Without air resistance absolutely not
but the globe doesn't know why gravity happens either
pulled vs falling is different i think
Good point um
in a sense yeah too, "pull" sometimes means force
Gravity is "pulling"
Density isn't a pull
by falling, i mean movement
time traveller: what day is it?
george bush: sept 11 2001
time traveller before or after the atta-
george bush: before
<:trolled:555217274907262976>
🤔
No its just an observable fact of the universe. Under atoms we dont know much what happens
i think that's how it is on both sides, for now
9:08. 9:09. 9:10. Bush
we don't understand everything
and that includes falling, pretty much
but we can describe it
and even disagree on descriptions
here's how I think about it, when we lift something off the ground we give it potential energy
you know i thinks its pre similar to osmosis
and it tries to return to it's natural state
Somehow when we plug in the acceleration on earth and height of an object it can be calculated exactly when and where it will land but yet somehow you think things somehow fall with uniform speed
if you ask me why does water move out of the cell when the water concentration inside the cell is higher than the concentration outside the cell
funny i see it like osmosis when relative density is acting. but then in a vacuum, it starts to seem more like the energy transfer thing