waitedavid137
22nd June 2012 - 03:39 AM
QUOTE (brupenney+Jun 21 2012, 11:58 AM)
Hi:
Some here will recall that I posted my ideas here before, but without much math or detail. I have a website now: gravityandspacerevisited.weebly.com for those who might be interested. I believe you will find my model stimulating and very different. Some will find many faults. I look forward to your constructive criticism.
Tks
I think you took dark flow a little too literally.
brucep
22nd June 2012 - 04:01 AM
QUOTE (brupenney+Jun 21 2012, 06:58 PM)
Hi:
Some here will recall that I posted my ideas here before, but without much math or detail. I have a website now: gravityandspacerevisited.weebly.com for those who might be interested. I believe you will find my model stimulating and very different. Some will find many faults. I look forward to your constructive criticism.
Tks
It's nonsense and it's really hard for me to understand why anybody would spend time thinking up 'a bullshit gravity theory' rather than learning GR. There's a complete Internet cottage industry entitled 'thinking up bullshit and posting it on public science forums'. So my constructive criticism is to learn the empirically verified gravitational theory and sh*tcan the nonsense.
Mekigal
22nd June 2012 - 04:08 AM
Viscosity ? You know what that means ? I think space is pretty much void of viscosity . You know what happens to a substance when it gets real cold like space ? Viscosity is not the word for it . Loss of viscosity is more like it . Maybe it is Me that don't know what the word means ?
Is space more like a vacuum ? That is what teach taught us in grade school ? Is that wrong ?
The saying was " In the Vacuum of space . Is that wrong ? See that implies negative pressure in my little mind . What happens to a balloon in wide open space ? I guess it would stay pressurized as long as you don't have a hole . What would happen to a breath of air introduced into wide open space ? Would it freeze ? I also thought most of everything was empty space. Even the smallest of particles have a bunch of empty space between the little buggers . In comparison to the parts that is. The stuff barely fills the empty space . I mean for real ? How close are atoms to each other . Do they over lap . I know I heard of some bonds that share and that is what makes then so strong and hard to pull apart . Like Iron and Silicon . Hard to brake the iron off of the silicon . Is that a true statement ?
O>k. get the chemist out. Who knows this stuff ? Chemist where for where art thou ?
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