Message from @the21cat
Discord ID: 601601004773048320
🤔
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
i woulds say IT JUST HAPPENS OK
We dont know but its an extremely observable fact
Ive seen it under a microscope in an inclass demo
if you look at the density tower it also makes sense
cat, idk who said uniform speed
that'd be pretty crazy tbh, if things always fell with one exact speed
i might be pushing this, but i think osmosis might make sense because, if you think of bits of water as a bunch of people in a room running around randomly
if the room has the same density everywhere, people will run and go within an area the same
but in high density places, more people would be leaving than coming in from the outside
No it moves like a vaccuum toward the salt/any other molecules
i think it's just gradients equalizing
Its descently fast
Yeah molarity tries to be constant
whether the "people" are water molecules themselves, or concentrations of salt
We dont know why it does though
im sorry dont things in vacuum all fall at the same speed
Yes
wait i think "we" do as in, they claim they do at least
regardless of weight or shape
and i thought i got it too
Yes
it seems like a statistical thing
similar to heat flowing in a material
Maybe
heat is literally defined as random chaotic movement
so that's why i say