Message from @BurritoPlanet

Discord ID: 578221446430588958


2019-05-15 11:46:22 UTC  

could it be static electricity ? their is 100 volts int he air per meter

2019-05-15 11:51:27 UTC  

hmmm

2019-05-15 11:51:33 UTC  

i doubt it because

2019-05-15 11:51:49 UTC  

some things are without electric charge and shown to have gravitational field

2019-05-15 11:58:26 UTC  

The weight of an object is defined as the force of gravity on the object and may be calculated as the mass times the acceleration of gravity, w = mg. Since the weight is a force, its SI unit is the newton.

2019-05-15 11:59:26 UTC  

idk

2019-05-15 11:59:43 UTC  

so a helium filled balloon has no mass becuase it weighs nothing

2019-05-15 11:59:51 UTC  

?

2019-05-15 12:00:13 UTC  

a helium ballon put it on a scale it weighs nothing

2019-05-15 12:00:25 UTC  

it has zero weight

2019-05-15 12:57:40 UTC  

whats the formula for mass

2019-05-15 13:03:22 UTC  

first step is find density

2019-05-15 13:06:23 UTC  

so you cant find desnity without knowing mass but u cant find mass without knowing the density. hmmmmmm

2019-05-15 14:04:05 UTC  

Helium still has weight, a filled helium tank weighs more than an empty one

2019-05-15 14:04:27 UTC  

Weight is the downward force, but it becomes slightly harder to measure if there's a big upward force acting on it as well

2019-05-15 14:04:30 UTC  

how about an empty ballon and a balloon filled with helium

2019-05-15 14:05:06 UTC  

Well the balloon filled with helium has both the mass of the balloon and helium

2019-05-15 14:05:19 UTC  

but it weighs nothing

2019-05-15 14:05:22 UTC  

But filling it with helium means that the upward force of buoyancy acts on it too, so it becomes hard to measure the weight

2019-05-15 14:05:35 UTC  

It still has weight acting downwards, there's just a bigger force pushing it up

2019-05-15 14:05:37 UTC  

impossible to measure the weight ?

2019-05-15 14:06:23 UTC  

Well a scale just measures the force pushing down on it, if there's another force present then you won't get a good measurement

2019-05-15 14:24:07 UTC  

so u cant measure it ?

2019-05-15 14:25:04 UTC  

There's other ways

2019-05-15 14:25:14 UTC  

Like putting a load of it into a gas bottle and measuring the change in weight of the bottle

2019-05-15 14:25:32 UTC  

Ok so i just joined who here is the round earther

2019-05-15 14:42:11 UTC  

i am

2019-05-15 14:42:35 UTC  
2019-05-15 14:44:06 UTC  

so if i put a helium balloon inside a container and weight the container before and after itll weight more with the helium b alloon in it ?

2019-05-15 14:44:24 UTC  

force is relative

2019-05-15 14:44:29 UTC  

same with speed

2019-05-15 14:59:18 UTC  

the helium will be pushing against to bottle trying to push it up, making it seem as if its lighter but in reality it is the same weight

2019-05-15 16:38:05 UTC  

@jeremy No it will weigh less because the helium balloon will displace more air

2019-05-15 16:38:33 UTC  

yeah i figured

2019-05-15 18:11:35 UTC  

@Human Sheeple weight= force of gravity not net force

2019-05-15 18:16:17 UTC  

youd have to prove mass attracts mass due to their mass before u start throwing that in formulas

2019-05-15 18:16:34 UTC  

the Formula literally is proof

2019-05-15 18:17:17 UTC  

it is proof of how the thing with the formula is applicable to everyday life

2019-05-15 18:17:24 UTC  

idk