Message from @SpiderLedgic (Cancer)
Discord ID: 650042663441268736
leaves?
yes.. it exits the vacuum chamber. against the "force of gravity"
Like, with constant suction?
and these pumps aren't even close to pulling 1x10^-17torr
yes against the pressure from outside yes
what if the pumps are off, though?
it takes work to produce a vacuum
your definition of gas is wrong. You are using a laymans definition
no suction, gas just sits there
you can even get layering
if no vacuum
"A gas is defined as a state of matter consisting of particles that have neither a defined volume nor defined shape."
eg. sulfur hexafluride
so, it fills up the container evenly
and the randomness of movement is causing the expanson etc
will layer on the bottom. and then one could purge the "headspace" with helium
then you would have a bilayer gas system.
with an invsible line in between
Gravity appears to accelerate downward however
but as soon as you start to apply a vacuum, the helium will go first (assume vacuum from top)
sulfur hexafluride layers the bottom?
ok i dont reasearch much but to think we live on a flat earth bewilders mw
u should know that gravity affects atoms depending on ther emass
then the line between them will rise as the helium leaves
eventually you'd have only sulfur hexafluoride
It’s not mass it’s energy and momentum in general
the more mass the stronger the force
and then eventually that would all go too
@Drewski4343 yes
why would nasa lie?
Even light has gravity but it is massless
it's denser than most gases
so you can actually "pour" it
like a liquid 🙂
light get affected by gravity cause gravity warps the space so that light itself can go straight but in warped space
you guys dont need to get all smart the earth is obviously not flat
you have a gas gradient in the athmosphere right?
same with water