Message from @tpofba
Discord ID: 680601865527754760
Well you can't see it, nobody knows what it would look like
They do
It looks like spandex stretched out
With balls on it
Not for certain, their math tells them what it should do but not exactly how it looks
They say it does
It looks like nothing most likely, unless they discover the gravaton (a theoretical particle that creates gravity, not found yet probably wont ever be) then it might look like a bunch of dots
Yes maybe they will find their graviton. The equivalence of finding a unicorn
There is an animal in vietnam that resembles a horse with one horn
Very rare
Ppl use to call rhinos unicorns i think
Not a unicorn though
Yeah
There was a deer with 1 horn or something and it became a legendary creature
Its called the Saola
Weird lol
Ikr
Well now you can tell everyone asian unicorns exist
Lol
:)
real life anime women
Area 51 is a experimental aircraft facility @tpofba maybe you should organize another raid to go find out
@Citizen Z The balloon doesn’t rise due to density alone, although that DOES have an effect. Gravity pulls the heaviest mass down, and air is heavier than helium. The balloon’s mass is heavier than air, but the helium suspends it. As the air is pulled down more than the helium, pressure will make the helium rise. Without gravity, balloons wouldn’t float. In a vacuum chamber, the balloon won’t float as it doesn’t have any heavier mass outside of it pushing it up as the mass seeks the lowest possible ground. This is also why water rises in a bath when you enter it, instead of you just floating on top of the water. This phenomenon is called buoyancy.
Evidently, you *can* have buoyancy in space or 0-G, but you need some kind of compressive force acting in the same way gravity would to force the interaction of the two entities. @Oceanic
Mhm. Some kind of force acting upon it.
Generally, the only way that would work is via some kind of artificial method.
Well, think of a piston, in a sense.
Or anything that acts in the same relative acceleration
Thanks for clarifying for others, I forgot to put that in.
No problem. It is more often than not a common thing overlooked
That buoyancy itself isn't only because of density or gravity, but also because of the chemical inter-molecular forces being incompatible for immiscible fluids.
Or even a solid and an incompatible fluid
That itself stems from the interaction of the molecules in such a capacity.
Though Pressure Gradients and their respective normal forces do have a hand
We are just looking at another level of the same question
As long as something is being forced, for lack of better word, harder than something else, and that mass is malleable, the other mass will be affected by buoyancy.
Essentially, I was just explaining a bit further why the Pressure Gradient acts in the way it does <@!680610519224287297>