Message from @kylie

Discord ID: 680584625248272590


2020-02-22 00:45:22 UTC  

ive been here awhile

2020-02-22 00:45:41 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/680575908570333278/image0-45-1.png

2020-02-22 00:46:02 UTC  

ty

2020-02-22 00:46:05 UTC  

Np

2020-02-22 00:46:14 UTC  

spectrum

2020-02-22 00:46:16 UTC  

lol

2020-02-22 00:46:44 UTC  

i dont think the person did that right

2020-02-22 00:51:52 UTC  

@Citizen Z things fall at different rates depending the air resistance - so they are influenced by that much but that still doesnt give the reason why things fall

2020-02-22 00:52:07 UTC  

or the predicted cause of it either

2020-02-22 01:13:36 UTC  

Density of the medium

2020-02-22 01:13:48 UTC  

A vacuum chamber has no air

2020-02-22 01:13:54 UTC  

Helium sinks

2020-02-22 01:14:40 UTC  

Changing the density of medium was direct cause for the change in direction

2020-02-22 01:15:01 UTC  

Why couldn't it be gravity instead?

2020-02-22 01:16:35 UTC  

So ive shown you using the scientific method that changing the density of the medium is the direct cause of things to rise or fall.

Your turn to show me using the scientific method, how gravity (general relativity) is proven.?

2020-02-22 01:19:05 UTC  

Well you haven't proven how it rises first of all, and gravity would also do that to helium in a vaccume. If you'd like a gravity test you could drop something from a high place and measure how quickly it falls, and then calculate how many meters it drops per second. It it drops about 9m a second, the speed gravity causes it to fall

2020-02-22 01:19:23 UTC  

You can't see it, its the attraction between two objects that have mass

2020-02-22 01:19:53 UTC  

If i drop a helium balloon in air it will rise. Because its less dense than the air

2020-02-22 01:20:02 UTC  

Indeed

2020-02-22 01:20:09 UTC  

Do that in the vaccume though

2020-02-22 01:20:19 UTC  

Things fall in those right

2020-02-22 01:20:21 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484516084846952451/680584632634179646/image0-45-1.png

2020-02-22 01:20:30 UTC  

Ok

2020-02-22 01:20:35 UTC  

@kylie yes because the medium was changed

2020-02-22 01:20:51 UTC  

Direct cause is the density of the medium

2020-02-22 01:21:18 UTC  

Fair enough, as long as you say it does the same stuff I'll leave it alone

2020-02-22 01:21:55 UTC  

Next year after I take physics I might be able to know more about that sort of stuff

2020-02-22 01:22:25 UTC  

Word

2020-02-22 01:24:07 UTC  

They are going to show you spandex stretched over a circular bar and they are going to throw balls on it and let you watch the balls spin around. Then they will tell you thats warping spacetime.

2020-02-22 01:24:49 UTC  

Well you can't see it, nobody knows what it would look like

2020-02-22 01:24:55 UTC  

They do

2020-02-22 01:25:06 UTC  

It looks like spandex stretched out

2020-02-22 01:25:11 UTC  

With balls on it

2020-02-22 01:25:26 UTC  

Not for certain, their math tells them what it should do but not exactly how it looks

2020-02-22 01:26:15 UTC  

They say it does

2020-02-22 01:27:20 UTC  

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

2020-02-22 01:28:55 UTC  

Yes maybe they will find their graviton. The equivalence of finding a unicorn

2020-02-22 01:29:22 UTC  

There is an animal in vietnam that resembles a horse with one horn

2020-02-22 01:29:30 UTC  

Very rare

2020-02-22 01:29:46 UTC  

Ppl use to call rhinos unicorns i think

2020-02-22 01:29:46 UTC  

Not a unicorn though