Message from @Saturn

Discord ID: 680630934848274472


2020-02-22 03:50:39 UTC  

Thanks for clarifying for others, I forgot to put that in.

2020-02-22 03:50:55 UTC  

No problem. It is more often than not a common thing overlooked

2020-02-22 03:51:29 UTC  

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.

2020-02-22 03:51:35 UTC  

Or even a solid and an incompatible fluid

2020-02-22 03:53:29 UTC  

That itself stems from the interaction of the molecules in such a capacity.

2020-02-22 03:53:38 UTC  

Though Pressure Gradients and their respective normal forces do have a hand

2020-02-22 03:53:46 UTC  

We are just looking at another level of the same question

2020-02-22 03:53:51 UTC  

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.

2020-02-22 03:54:54 UTC  

Essentially, I was just explaining a bit further why the Pressure Gradient acts in the way it does <@!680610519224287297>

2020-02-22 04:20:41 UTC  

@Oceanic exactly. The density of the medium changing is the direct cause for the helium to rise or fall.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/680630016211550229/image0-45-1.png

2020-02-22 04:21:22 UTC  

And it is still enacted upon my a compressive, and consistent, force.

2020-02-22 04:21:49 UTC  

Yep.

2020-02-22 04:22:20 UTC  

As it must be, otherwise it really doesn't work.

2020-02-22 04:22:47 UTC  

No. Just changing the density. Thats what we can prove

2020-02-22 04:23:06 UTC  

Well, what keeps a brick in contact with a steel plate?

2020-02-22 04:23:24 UTC  

Different densities should mean that one is not forced into the other, and can freely roam around.

2020-02-22 04:23:31 UTC  

Density of the two

2020-02-22 04:23:44 UTC  

So...you're arguing Relative Density?

2020-02-22 04:23:47 UTC  

They r solids

2020-02-22 04:24:07 UTC  

They are. And even if we have a fluid on-top of the steel plate, it is still compressed into it.

2020-02-22 04:24:20 UTC  

Which doesn't concur with this theory of it only being density.

2020-02-22 04:24:24 UTC  

Yeah and

2020-02-22 04:24:35 UTC  

As under that postulate, most matter would be ejected off the surface of the earth.

2020-02-22 04:25:17 UTC  

Citizen, do you think a balloon would still float without gravity?

2020-02-22 04:25:29 UTC  

Its what we can prove. Feel free to prove warped space time

2020-02-22 04:25:44 UTC  

Ill be waiting. Nite

2020-02-22 04:25:51 UTC  

We can pretty easily prove gravity. It just depends if you want to accept it or not.

2020-02-22 04:26:13 UTC  

As for warped space time, I'd answer with the relativistic motion of high-velocity matter.

2020-02-22 04:26:27 UTC  

^

2020-02-22 04:26:46 UTC  

We actually have pretty solid equations for that.

2020-02-22 04:26:49 UTC  

Let me find one.

2020-02-22 04:26:58 UTC  

This has happened with Scott Kelly.

2020-02-22 04:26:58 UTC  

Ah, right, cannot post it.

2020-02-22 04:27:10 UTC  

They'd probably argue that he's a liar.

2020-02-22 04:27:13 UTC  

Or some variation thereof.

2020-02-22 04:27:21 UTC  

True.

2020-02-22 04:27:27 UTC  

Ah, satellites!

2020-02-22 04:28:03 UTC  

They need to adjust internal clocks every few months due to moving at relativists speeds.

2020-02-22 04:28:05 UTC  

They argue those are balloons.

2020-02-22 04:28:09 UTC  

And are also fake.

2020-02-22 04:28:13 UTC  

...