Gravity is Weird
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13742
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
Gravity is Weird
Cat (n.) A bipolar creature which would as soon gouge your eyes out as it would cuddle.
Re: Gravity is Weird
Purty.
Re: Gravity is Weird
Well, not really gravity. It's resonance harmonics. Still really cool though!
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13742
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
Re: Gravity is Weird
Well, they did say that gravity was influencing the wave interactions. They've even associating gravity waves with the formation of clear air turbulence.
http://www.livescience.com/25251-myster ... lence.html
http://www.livescience.com/25251-myster ... lence.html
Cat (n.) A bipolar creature which would as soon gouge your eyes out as it would cuddle.
Re: Gravity is Weird
lol. Tc, gravity effect just about everything on this planet that has mass.
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13742
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
Re: Gravity is Weird
Yeah, but to think that gravity has waves in it boggles the mind. I'm always thinking, incorrectly apparently, that gravity is a constant acting force, not a fluid one with variations. I was never good at physics I guess.Duper wrote:lol. Tc, gravity effect just about everything on this planet that has mass.
Cat (n.) A bipolar creature which would as soon gouge your eyes out as it would cuddle.
- Foil
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4900
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:31 pm
- Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
- Contact:
Re: Gravity is Weird
I think you're confusing two things:tunnelcat wrote:Yeah, but to think that gravity has waves in it boggles the mind.
1. Gravity waves, produced by a restoring gravitational force vs. a displacement (e.g. the picture above, or ocean waves).
2. Gravitational waves, theorized relativistic ripples in spacetime (this has nothing to do with the star-patterned waves in your original post).
- Aggressor Prime
- DBB Captain
- Posts: 763
- Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 3:01 am
- Location: USA
Re: Gravity is Weird
English language, why you so bad for science?
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13742
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
Re: Gravity is Weird
That's what I was getting confused about. I guess I had some concept of rippling gravity waves going through the substance that caused those wave formations. Now it makes more sense.Foil wrote:I think you're confusing two things:tunnelcat wrote:Yeah, but to think that gravity has waves in it boggles the mind.
1. Gravity waves, produced by a restoring gravitational force vs. a displacement (e.g. the picture above, or ocean waves).
2. Gravitational waves, theorized relativistic ripples in spacetime (this has nothing to do with the star-patterned waves in your original post).
Cat (n.) A bipolar creature which would as soon gouge your eyes out as it would cuddle.
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13742
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
Re: Gravity is Weird
Oooh, more gravity wave pictures, in Venus' atmosphere.
http://news.yahoo.com/weird-39-gravity- ... 42179.html
http://news.yahoo.com/weird-39-gravity- ... 42179.html
Cat (n.) A bipolar creature which would as soon gouge your eyes out as it would cuddle.
Re: Gravity is Weird
They say the Tsunami in Japan had the same effect on our atmosphere. I think the only similarity would be on a quantum scale. Just a moving of particles.
https://student.societyforscience.org/a ... traced-sky
https://student.societyforscience.org/a ... traced-sky
Re: Gravity is Weird
I like this because I think so too.“There is no escape from a black hole in classical theory,” Hawking told Nature. Quantum theory, however, “enables energy and information to escape from a black hole.” A full explanation of the process, the physicist admits, would require a theory that successfully merges gravity with the other fundamental forces of nature. But that's a goal that has eluded physicists for nearly a century. “The correct treatment,” Hawking says, “remains a mystery.”