Message from @Vitmar

Discord ID: 642136313809731633


2019-11-07 20:23:40 UTC  

lol do your own homework

2019-11-07 20:24:04 UTC  

No it's 5, -4

2019-11-07 20:24:13 UTC  

Oopsie

2019-11-07 20:27:32 UTC  

I could tell you the answer but I'd rather keep it for myself and make millions off it

2019-11-07 20:29:40 UTC  

:D

2019-11-07 21:17:01 UTC  

let's have a debate

2019-11-07 21:17:11 UTC  

can we say PI and e are both 3 ?

2019-11-07 22:00:41 UTC  

If someone integrated gravity with quantum mechanics I'm pretty sure they'd be the first person is a discord server to randomly and successfully create a theory of everything

2019-11-07 22:43:08 UTC  

@Quorum I did it it was decently tough

2019-11-07 22:43:14 UTC  

Took me a couple hours

2019-11-07 22:54:21 UTC  

lolwut ?

2019-11-07 22:54:37 UTC  

Yeah

2019-11-07 22:54:44 UTC  

I guess it's pretty cool

2019-11-07 22:55:42 UTC  

Successfully renormalized quantum gravity, no big deal.

2019-11-07 22:55:57 UTC  

Yeah I did it in my free time

2019-11-07 22:56:09 UTC  

I'm sure it's been done before

2019-11-07 22:56:38 UTC  

@lapizzle The point was that the different air density (elevation) would affect buoyancy and the weight exerted. You can see this by taking Kenya, highest elevation point out of all the results, is the lightest weight tested. Using a vacuum chamber would negate the air density factor and make it controlled so you can prove gravity.

2019-11-07 22:56:54 UTC  

Yeah, no large number of scientists are actively trying to figure it out at the moment.

2019-11-07 22:59:19 UTC  

@lapizzle But they never use a vacuum chamber do they? They always ignore the fact that a lower air density makes things lighter, you can see this with the Kenya example that I pointed out.

2019-11-07 22:59:58 UTC  

I'm saying you should test it if you don't believe that it is an insignificant variable

2019-11-07 23:00:27 UTC  

lower air density makes things lighter

2019-11-07 23:00:41 UTC  

hmmm

2019-11-07 23:00:47 UTC  

interesting

2019-11-07 23:00:48 UTC  

btw

2019-11-07 23:00:59 UTC  

do you know how sattelites work @rivenator12113 ?

2019-11-07 23:01:04 UTC  

it's very interesting

2019-11-07 23:01:05 UTC  

I don't have all the results to test it out, I only have the location and how much it weighs with what the guy gave.

2019-11-07 23:02:07 UTC  

many flat erthers say it's impossible because sattelites and gravity are a huge contradiction

2019-11-07 23:02:07 UTC  

I don't have any good evidence against that but flat earthers would say that they are attached to high altitude balloons

2019-11-07 23:02:18 UTC  

but actually

2019-11-07 23:02:32 UTC  

without gravity sattelites would just make a straight line into the space

2019-11-07 23:02:51 UTC  

when I was a child I have a small Apache helicopter toy

2019-11-07 23:03:06 UTC  

it had a little propeller which made it go foward

2019-11-07 23:03:22 UTC  

and it was attached to the celling

2019-11-07 23:03:32 UTC  

by a small nylon string

2019-11-07 23:03:50 UTC  

when it wasn't turned on it goes to the middle right?

2019-11-07 23:03:58 UTC  

but when you turn it on

2019-11-07 23:04:23 UTC  

it goes foward and then starts rotating

2019-11-07 23:04:42 UTC  

now imagine that where the string is attached is Earth

2019-11-07 23:04:58 UTC  

and the helicopter is a space station

2019-11-07 23:05:26 UTC  

speed is vectorial