Message from @kylie

Discord ID: 679495819757355018


2020-02-19 01:09:01 UTC  

Citizen Z gravity isn't a theory it's an observation of why things fall. There are theories to explain it, for example general relativity, and special reletivity. But those are all wrong, because they can't explain black holes

2020-02-19 01:09:07 UTC  

take 20 gallons then dump it on yourself and see it ensds up a sphere

2020-02-19 01:09:28 UTC  

like a drop

2020-02-19 01:09:29 UTC  

try it with a gallon of water

2020-02-19 01:09:32 UTC  

1 single drop

2020-02-19 01:09:33 UTC  

For example, your theory to explain it is density

2020-02-19 01:09:38 UTC  

SURFACE TENSION is not gravity

2020-02-19 01:09:48 UTC  

try it with a gallon

2020-02-19 01:10:02 UTC  

if you can make a gallon of water turn to a sphere then i will believe you

2020-02-19 01:10:10 UTC  

small puddle maintain level

2020-02-19 01:10:14 UTC  

of course they do

2020-02-19 01:10:24 UTC  

cuz the oceans are tr8illions of gallons

2020-02-19 01:10:29 UTC  

the gallon of water doesnt have the right amount of surface tension to become a sphere

2020-02-19 01:10:32 UTC  

yeah and?

2020-02-19 01:10:34 UTC  

can u show me one gallon make a sphere?

2020-02-19 01:10:54 UTC  

You can see one drop make a dome

2020-02-19 01:12:30 UTC  

Did you know that one water drop makes a dome shape on leaves?

2020-02-19 01:12:59 UTC  

k now show me a gallon of water turn to a sphere

2020-02-19 01:13:08 UTC  

Cant rlly do that

2020-02-19 01:13:16 UTC  

then read me the definition of what causes a droplet to form

2020-02-19 01:13:47 UTC  

The droplet forms because of hydrogen bonds between water molecules

2020-02-19 01:13:55 UTC  

Sadly they are very weak

2020-02-19 01:13:57 UTC  

are droplets formed by gravity or surface tension?

2020-02-19 01:14:14 UTC  

so water likes to stick to itself or gravity did it?

2020-02-19 01:15:32 UTC  

It sticks to itself, due to hydrogen/covelent bonds, and the suface tension makes it stay in droplet form, but once there is enough water together a downwards force makes it flatten a bit

2020-02-19 01:16:21 UTC  

Gravity wouldnt be strong enough to do that, it's the weakest force that I can think of

2020-02-19 01:16:42 UTC  

Gravity hasn’t been a force since 1915

2020-02-19 01:16:51 UTC  

Explain plz

2020-02-19 01:17:03 UTC  

Gravity is not a force

2020-02-19 01:17:05 UTC  

relativity im guessing

2020-02-19 01:17:11 UTC  

^

2020-02-19 01:17:31 UTC  

No gravity is the observation relativity is the theory behind it...

2020-02-19 01:17:59 UTC  

And if it isnt @H8mz88 what would you call it theoretically?

2020-02-19 01:18:11 UTC  

A pseudo force

2020-02-19 01:18:27 UTC  

And what makes it fake?

2020-02-19 01:18:53 UTC  

We do orbit around the sun you know

2020-02-19 01:18:57 UTC  

gravity is the result of curved spacetime

2020-02-19 01:19:16 UTC  

Because there isn't a push/pull with gravity

2020-02-19 01:19:54 UTC  

@0ct0plasm science is changing all the time - as of right now, yes you're right but there is still a few problems with special relativity

2020-02-19 01:20:03 UTC  

oh definitely

2020-02-19 01:20:19 UTC  

the weirdest one being how it interacts with quantum mechanics