Gravity, what powers it?
Forums › General Discussion › Gravity, what powers it?-
Anything with mass is attracted to another thing with mass.
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Suppose you dropped an apple and let it fall to the ground. If the before principal is true, then while the apple falls to the earth, the earth comes up to the apple. However, the earth's movement is so slight that it cannot be felt and isn't enough to greatly change anything. -
ནཝཇངᎯངᎿཔᎦ༽༨རསཁྭ wrote:
I don't understand 👍Basically low mass objects are attracted to higher mass objects. Here's an example
Fat Raymond gets the womenfolk. Fat Raymond is the high mass object and womenfolk are the low mass objects.
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Add MajorFail wrote:
Hmm, maybe. There are often exceptions in rules though.Anything with mass is attracted to another thing with mass.
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Suppose you dropped an apple and let it fall to the ground. If the before principal is true, then while the apple falls to the earth, the earth comes up to the apple. However, the earth's movement is so slight that it cannot be felt and isn't enough to greatly change anything. -
Everyone is wrong. According to issac newton, when the apple fell from the tree, Chuck Norris came and threw the apple so hard it went through space and time and hit him in the head
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UnknownAssassin wrote:
Technically, they do "fall" towards each other, but it is all about spatial relitivity and mass proportions. Because the Earth has more mass it pulls the apple toward it with more force, and "faster" because of the distance from the center of the earth (remembering gravitational acceleration).Add MajorFail wrote:
Hmm, maybe. There are often exceptions in rules though.Anything with mass is attracted to another thing with mass.
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Suppose you dropped an apple and let it fall to the ground. If the before principal is true, then while the apple falls to the earth, the earth comes up to the apple. However, the earth's movement is so slight that it cannot be felt and isn't enough to greatly change anything. -
silly_gurf wrote:
No comment 😒Everyone is wrong. According to issac newton, when the apple fell from the tree, Chuck Norris came and threw the apple so hard it went through space and time and hit him in the head
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Zebulon Pike wrote:
Hmm, makes sense.UnknownAssassin wrote:
Technically, they do "fall" towards each other, but it is all about spatial relitivity and mass proportions. Because the Earth has more mass it pulls the apple toward it with more force, and "faster" because of the distance from the center of the earth (remembering gravitational acceleration).Add MajorFail wrote:
Hmm, maybe. There are often exceptions in rules though.Anything with mass is attracted to another thing with mass.
Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Suppose you dropped an apple and let it fall to the ground. If the before principal is true, then while the apple falls to the earth, the earth comes up to the apple. However, the earth's movement is so slight that it cannot be felt and isn't enough to greatly change anything. -
Wow.. I'm suprized you guys have not came to conclusion with the obvious answer yet... Obviously, it's the midi-chlorians that creates the force that inevitablely syncs all types of life and energy together.. Geesh 😓
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Queen Nicole wrote:
And your source is?Wow.. I'm suprized you guys have not came to conclusion with the obvious answer yet... Obviously, it's the midi-chlorians that creates the force that inevitablely syncs all types of life and energy together.. Geesh 😓
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