Message from @ghostbuster4

Discord ID: 684500858284802141


2020-03-03 20:40:07 UTC  

Gravity is weird

2020-03-03 20:40:09 UTC  

but since we cant see any objects in dark matter

2020-03-03 20:40:09 UTC  

supersymmetry doesn't exist

2020-03-03 20:40:13 UTC  

we know this

2020-03-03 20:40:13 UTC  

maybe you dont need objects

2020-03-03 20:40:19 UTC  

maybe it can crease

2020-03-03 20:40:21 UTC  

gravity is an unknown mechanism

2020-03-03 20:40:35 UTC  

say the 'gravity waves' would be waves of creasing in spacetime

2020-03-03 20:40:39 UTC  

but they dont die out

2020-03-03 20:40:41 UTC  

perhaps gravity is just the EM force viewed from an external reference frame

2020-03-03 20:40:48 UTC  

so you have peaks and throughs of interference

2020-03-03 20:40:52 UTC  

between galaxies and shit

2020-03-03 20:40:53 UTC  

I think that's what the waves are

2020-03-03 20:41:01 UTC  

gravity waves makes me laugh

2020-03-03 20:41:01 UTC  

Fluctuations in spacetime itself

2020-03-03 20:41:02 UTC  

and it looks like there's more matter there

2020-03-03 20:41:15 UTC  

and afaik you can bend it with EM

2020-03-03 20:41:33 UTC  

there were some experiments but it's hypothetical so far i think

2020-03-03 20:41:40 UTC  

EM also moves planets and effects matter

2020-03-03 20:41:58 UTC  

but this isn't something we even try to account for

2020-03-03 20:42:25 UTC  

ah yes

2020-03-03 20:42:32 UTC  

that requires the theory of everything

2020-03-03 20:42:43 UTC  

i just really think we're seeing things that arent there with gravity lol

2020-03-03 20:43:00 UTC  

better notion is that Fg = g2-g1/d^3

2020-03-03 20:43:25 UTC  

nah, just quantum gravity

2020-03-03 20:43:38 UTC  

was that supposed to be m 😛

2020-03-03 20:43:47 UTC  

g for

2020-03-03 20:43:48 UTC  

uh

2020-03-03 20:43:51 UTC  

yes and no.

2020-03-03 20:43:57 UTC  

oh Fg forcegravity

2020-03-03 20:43:59 UTC  

i see

2020-03-03 20:44:07 UTC  

yup

2020-03-03 20:44:22 UTC  

d cubed?

2020-03-03 20:44:28 UTC  

to account for 3d space lol

2020-03-03 20:44:28 UTC  

normally we just use 'm' but what if 'm' isn't always constant

2020-03-03 20:44:52 UTC  

This is actually wrong

2020-03-03 20:45:17 UTC  

yup. same idea. that the distance isn't straight linear but it's the components which under normal circumstances don't matter

2020-03-03 20:46:13 UTC  

it's rather naive to think that we have seen/measured all of the various factors that can effect both mass and gravitation

2020-03-03 20:46:27 UTC  

thus assume their MUST be more mass

2020-03-03 20:46:56 UTC  

id say so