The Flat Earth Society

Flat Earth Discussion Boards => Flat Earth Theory => Topic started by: WellRoundedIndividual on May 03, 2019, 02:04:11 PM

Title: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: WellRoundedIndividual on May 03, 2019, 02:04:11 PM
In the wiki, it states from https://wiki.tfes.org/Universal_Acceleration:

"In the FE universe, gravitation (not gravity) exists in other celestial bodies. The gravitational pull of the stars, for example, causes observable tidal effects on Earth.

Q: Why does gravity vary with altitude?

A: The moon and stars have a slight gravitational pull"

and

"Universal Acceleration (UA) is a theory of gravity in the Flat Earth Model. UA asserts that the Earth is accelerating 'upward' at a constant rate of 9.8m/s^2.

This produces the effect commonly referred to as "gravity"."

and from https://wiki.tfes.org/Celestial_Gravitation:

"Celestial Gravitation is a part of some Flat Earth models which involve an attraction by all objects of mass on earth to the heavenly bodies. This is not the same as Gravity, since Celestial Gravitation does not imply an attraction between objects of mass on Earth. Celestial Gravitation accounts for tides and other gravimetric anomalies across the Earth's plane."

First, you acknowledge that CG is only part of some flat earth models. Yet, in UA, you imply its existence as a certainty. I think this is due to the known gravimetric anomalies that exist on earth (both FE and RE acknowledge this). However, it is shown that even though some anomalies exist due to high altitudes (which could be explained by CG), there are also anomalies that are dependent on rock density (which is how some mineral deposits are tracked and found). This is not explainable by UA or CG - in UA all objects on the surface of the Earth are accelerating at the same speed - so CG only accounting for altitude based anomalies cannot provide a full explanation of UA "gravity." Something else must exist. No matter what you can say about anomalies existing and going against the theory of RE gravity, you still cannot explain it by simply using UA and CG. Earth must either have its own CG, or gravity must exist.

Yet, contradictory to what you state elsewhere (that anomalies and CG exist), you also state: "Gravity appears to behave as if the earth is accelerating upwards, that there is no gravity gradient, and there are no other gravitating sources around us."

My premise is this: if other bodies of mass have CG, then earth has CG. Anomalies exist that cannot be explained by CG and UA alone. All of your above statements are contradictory or false.



Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 04:33:51 PM
Please reference an experiment for your idea that gravity varies by altitude. A lot of that is based on theory.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 03, 2019, 04:52:57 PM
I have neither the time nor the means to make a quick journey to Mount Everest equipped with a set of bathroom scales so I can check for any differences in my weight at base camp and then at the summit. However given that gravitational force obeys the inverse square law that would imply that if your weight is F(g) then it will decrease as the distance between two masses increases. I am one mass (m) and the Earth (with the core as the centre of mass) is the other mass (M).

There are loads of websites which seem to agree with this prediction and provide a detailed explanation as to why.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: WellRoundedIndividual on May 03, 2019, 05:23:44 PM
I dont have to reference any experiment. RE and FE theory already agrees on this! It is stated in your Wiki that as elevation changes "gravity" changes due to CG! You (FE community as a whole - not any specific individual) therefore believe gravity anomalies exist due to altitude. Ridiculous.

Or is this a cover your ass kind of case? "Oh, we may not actually believe in CG, but just in case RE is correct and that gravity anomalies exist, lets come up with a reason in FE world as to why they exist."  Why don't you produce an experiment that shows that CG exists? Since FE is making the claim!
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: QED on May 03, 2019, 05:48:34 PM
Please reference an experiment for your idea that gravity varies by altitude. A lot of that is based on theory.

A tremendous plethora of data exists such that the variations across the the entire earths surface have been mapped several times.

https://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/k-4/features/F_Measuring_Gravity_With_Grace.html
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 06:03:31 PM
I dont have to reference any experiment.

Then it appears that you have no argument.

Please reference an experiment for your idea that gravity varies by altitude. A lot of that is based on theory.

A tremendous plethora of data exists such that the variations across the the entire earths surface have been mapped several times.

https://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/k-4/features/F_Measuring_Gravity_With_Grace.html


Gravimeters are seismometers and operate under the theory of "gravity waves" and "infragravity waves". It's not a direct measurement of gravity: https://wiki.tfes.org/Gravimetry

Also, that's not an experiment for gravity by altitude.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tumeni on May 03, 2019, 06:25:41 PM
Please reference an experiment for your idea that gravity varies by altitude.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_p2ELD7npw

It lasts one hour, so if you're back here decrying it in 10 minutes, we'll all KNOW you're just cherry-picking from it.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: stack on May 03, 2019, 06:26:41 PM
I dont have to reference any experiment.

Then it appears that you have no argument.

Please reference an experiment for your idea that gravity varies by altitude. A lot of that is based on theory.

A tremendous plethora of data exists such that the variations across the the entire earths surface have been mapped several times.

https://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/k-4/features/F_Measuring_Gravity_With_Grace.html


Gravimeters are seismeters and operate under the theory of "gravity waves" and "infragravity waves". It's not a direct measurement of gravity: https://wiki.tfes.org/Gravimetry

Would this be any different than measuring the amplitude of sound using sound waves?
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: WellRoundedIndividual on May 03, 2019, 06:30:00 PM
It appears your WIKI is false, as well, since you are denying the existence gravity anomalies, yet attempt to explain these anomalies that exist with CG. So which is it? I am not here to conduct experiments.  This forum is Flat Earth Theory not Flat Earth Investigations. I am refuting your claims in your theory.

YOUR WIKI literally claims that gravity varies by altitude due to CG. And now you are denying that this exists!

YOUR WIKI literally claims in one spot that celestial gravitation exists - moon and stars.  Yet I quoted in my OP that YOUR WIKI states that "there are no other sources of gravitation." YOUR WIKI is contradicting itself. If there are no other sources of gravitation, then CG does not exist! If CG does not exist, how does FE explain gravity anomalies!
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 06:35:26 PM
YOUR WIKI literally claims that gravity varies by altitude due to CG. And now you are denying that this exists!

Actually what you quoted says that CG is in some models, not all models. You appear to have constructed a false argument.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: WellRoundedIndividual on May 03, 2019, 06:38:30 PM
Which is why I bring up this point. Your theory is contradictory. See my OP.



In the wiki, it states from https://wiki.tfes.org/Universal_Acceleration:

"In the FE universe, gravitation (not gravity) exists in other celestial bodies. The gravitational pull of the stars, for example, causes observable tidal effects on Earth.

Q: Why does gravity vary with altitude?

A: The moon and stars have a slight gravitational pull"



This is in UA! Are you now saying that UA is false? Which is it? Is there CG? Is there variations in gravity?
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 06:55:10 PM
As you have quoted, the CG page clarifies that CG in some models, not all models.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 03, 2019, 07:40:26 PM
Quote
The gravitational pull of the stars, for example, causes observable tidal effects on Earth

Given that the next nearest star after the Sun is 4.3 lightyears away, could someone offer me an example of evidence that shows this to be the case?  After all you have said that the effects are observable.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: spherical on May 03, 2019, 08:12:59 PM
The Twin Grace Satellites mapped the planet's gravity.  They orbit the planet at the same altitude (286 miles), one just 137 miles behind another following the exact same path.  When the leading satellite finds a place with pronounced space deformity (strong gravity, even if little), it slides a bit into such less dense space and accelerates a bit. The opposite is true, when finding a place where gravity is weaker (less space deformity), the leading satellite slows down its speed.

(https://thumbor.forbes.com/thumbor/960x0/https%3A%2F%2Fblogs-images.forbes.com%2Fjillianscudder%2Ffiles%2F2017%2F03%2Fgraceart-1200x853.jpg)

Both satellites keep track of their distance precisely, and based on minute changes in such distance they log abnormalities in the space deformation, caused by uneven mass down on the planet.   Several different reasons the planet may present differences in mass, material composition, mountains, valleys, water, etc.   The images on this NASA link are exaggerated to demonstrate the survey results.'

https://nasaviz.gsfc.nasa.gov/11234 (https://nasaviz.gsfc.nasa.gov/11234)

The European satellite GOCE also mapped the planet changes in space deformation caused by differences in mass below.  This satellite helped to track movement of lava underground, and melting glaciers. It helped to produce the first high resolution map of the boundary between the Earth's crust and mantle.  To increase resolution, the satellite was lowered to an altitude from 158 to 146 miles.

https://www.space.com/18575-gravity-satellite-lowers-orbit.html (https://www.space.com/18575-gravity-satellite-lowers-orbit.html)
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 08:28:04 PM
I've clarified a section on the Universal Accelerator page:

https://wiki.tfes.org/Universal_Acceleration

Quote
== Variations in Gravity ==

'''Q:''' Why does gravity vary with altitude?

'''A:''' According to some models (https://wiki.tfes.org/Celestial_Gravitation) the moon and stars have a slight gravitational pull. This is given as an answer to tidal effects and variations of gravity with altitude. Other models question whether variations in gravity actually exist (https://wiki.tfes.org/Variations_in_Gravity).
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 03, 2019, 08:47:19 PM
Well that's very good of you Tom.  Since reference is made to multiple models, which do you subscribe to? How do you account for any tidal effects being felt on Earth from the stars given how distant they are?
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: markjo on May 03, 2019, 09:00:11 PM
YOUR WIKI literally claims that gravity varies by altitude due to CG. And now you are denying that this exists!

Actually what you quoted says that CG is in some models, not all models. You appear to have constructed a false argument.
Not quite.  If there were no observed variations in gravity at different altitudes, then there would be no need for CG in any model.  The mere fact CG is proposed in any model is an acknowledgement that the observed gravitational variations are real and need an explanation.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 03, 2019, 09:12:18 PM
Quote
The mere fact CG is proposed in any model is an acknowledgement that the observed gravitational variations are real and need an explanation.

I'm not sure that CG as such (the way it is described in the FE Wiki) has ever been directly observed.  Gravitational variations have been observed but they are not caused by what the FE community describe as celestial gravitation. That has just been made up as part of FE theory.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 09:22:38 PM
Well that's very good of you Tom.  Since reference is made to multiple models, which do you subscribe to? How do you account for any tidal effects being felt on Earth from the stars given how distant tahey are?

I personally don't believe that there are variations in gravity. The only devices claiming to detect tidal effect appear to be the seismometers (gravimeters).

YOUR WIKI literally claims that gravity varies by altitude due to CG. And now you are denying that this exists!

Actually what you quoted says that CG is in some models, not all models. You appear to have constructed a false argument.
Not quite.  If there were no observed variations in gravity at different altitudes, then there would be no need for CG in any model.  The mere fact CG is proposed in any model is an acknowledgement that the observed gravitational variations are real and need an explanation.

CG accepts the claims of the standard model. The fact that it is proposed isn't necessarily verification that those things have actually been observed. CG is a holdover from a time when there was less research done on the gravity experiments.

If you can find some experiments that do claim to see deviations, I'm happy to put it in the Wiki in support of CG. I don't really care either way. What I found when I went looking for them, provided in the Variations of Gravity page, suggest that there are no deviations.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 03, 2019, 09:38:11 PM
Quote
I personally don't believe that there are variations in gravity. Those tidal effects are only being felt in seismometers (gravimeters).

There are certainly no gravitational variations caused by the stars. Far too distant. But variations caused by altitude increase are real enough. Very slight within the range of what you can achieve without resorting to air/spacecraft, but measurable nonetheless.

http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/about-us/42-our-solar-system/the-earth/gravity/93-does-gravity-vary-across-the-surface-of-the-earth-intermediate
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 09:50:41 PM
Quote
I personally don't believe that there are variations in gravity. Those tidal effects are only being felt in seismometers (gravimeters).

There are certainly no gravitational variations caused by the stars. Far too distant. But variations caused by altitude increase are real enough. Very slight within the range of what you can achieve without resorting to air/spacecraft, but measurable nonetheless.

http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/about-us/42-our-solar-system/the-earth/gravity/93-does-gravity-vary-across-the-surface-of-the-earth-intermediate

I think that link may be basing its argument on theory rather than experiment. I couldn't find any experimental reference. Take a look and see if you can can find what experiment, if any, the author is referencing.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 03, 2019, 10:49:28 PM
Check for yourself Tom.  In just a few minutes of web searching I found numerous websites that support the same view. If I can find the information then so can you I'm sure. As I said earlier I would happily travel to Mount Everest (highest point above sea level you can reach directly on the surface) and carry out an experiment myself to confirm the hypothesis but I don't have the means to.  Supply me with the gear and the funds and I will book the flight.

Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 10:57:56 PM
I did check other sources. The claims are based on theory, not experiment. Here is another source which does talk about the experiments:

https://www.britannica.com/science/gravity-physics/Experimental-study-of-gravitation

Aside from the Gravimeters (sismometers) and the Cavendish Experiment (inconsistent short range experiments), which is addressed on our Wiki, the Encyclopedia Britannica seems to agree that there are no variations in gravity:

Quote
Early in the 1970s an experiment by the American physicist Daniel R. Long seemed to show a deviation from the inverse square law at a range of about 0.1 metre. Long compared the maximum attractions of two rings upon a test mass hung from the arm of a torsion balance. The maximum attraction of a ring occurs at a particular point on the axis and is determined by the mass and dimensions of the ring. If the ring is moved until the force on the test mass is greatest, the distance between the test mass and the ring is not needed. Two later experiments over the same range showed no deviation from the inverse square law. In one, conducted by the American physicist Riley Newman and his colleagues, a test mass hung on a torsion balance was moved around in a long hollow cylinder. The cylinder approximates a complete gravitational enclosure and, allowing for a small correction because it is open at the ends, the force on the test mass should not depend on its location within the cylinder. No deviation from the inverse square law was found. In the other experiment, performed in Cambridge, Eng., by Y.T. Chen and associates, the attractions of two solid cylinders of different mass were balanced against a third cylinder so that only the separations of the cylinders had to be known; it was not necessary to know the distances of any from a test mass. Again no deviation of more than one part in 104 from the inverse square law was found. Other, somewhat less-sensitive experiments at ranges up to one metre or so also have failed to establish any greater deviation.

The geophysical tests go back to a method for the determination of the constant of gravitation that had been used in the 19th century, especially by the British astronomer Sir George Airy. Suppose the value of gravity g is measured at the top and bottom of a horizontal slab of rock of thickness t and density d. The values for the top and bottom will be different for two reasons. First, the top of the slab is t farther from the centre of Earth, and so the measured value of gravity will be less by 2(t/R)g, where R is the radius of Earth. Second, the slab itself attracts objects above and below it toward its centre; the difference between the downward and upward attractions of the slab is 4πGtd. Thus, a value of G may be estimated. Frank D. Stacey and his colleagues in Australia made such measurements at the top and bottom of deep mine shafts and claimed that there may be a real difference between their value of G and the best value from laboratory experiments. The difficulties lie in obtaining reliable samples of the density and in taking account of varying densities at greater depths. Similar uncertainties appear to have afflicted measurements in a deep bore hole in the Greenland ice sheet.

New measurements have failed to detect any deviation from the inverse square law. The most thorough investigation was carried out from a high tower in Colorado. Measurements were made with a gravimeter at different heights and coupled with an extensive survey of gravity around the base of the tower. Any variations of gravity over the surface that would give rise to variations up the height of the tower were estimated with great care. Allowance was also made for deflections of the tower and for the accelerations of its motions. The final result was that no deviation from the inverse square law could be found.

...

Thus far, all of the most reliable experiments and observations reveal no deviation from the inverse square law.


Quote
Experiments with ordinary pendulums test the principle of equivalence to no better than about one part in 105. Eötvös obtained much better discrimination with a torsion balance. His tests depended on comparing gravitational forces with inertial forces for masses of different composition. Eötvös set up a torsion balance to compare, for each of two masses, the gravitational attraction of Earth with the inertial forces due to the rotation of Earth about its polar axis. His arrangement of the masses was not optimal, and he did not have the sensitive electronic means of control and reading that are now available. Nonetheless, Eötvös found that the weak equivalence principle (see above Gravitational fields and the theory of general relativity) was satisfied to within one part in 109 for a number of very different chemicals, some of which were quite exotic. His results were later confirmed by the Hungarian physicist János Renner. Renner’s work has been analyzed recently in great detail because of the suggestion that it could provide evidence for a new force. It seems that the uncertainties of the experiments hardly allow such analyses.

Eötvös also suggested that the attraction of the Sun upon test masses could be compared with the inertial forces of Earth’s orbital motion about the Sun. He performed some experiments, verifying equivalence with an accuracy similar to that which he had obtained with his terrestrial experiments. The solar scheme has substantial experimental advantages, and the American physicist Robert H. Dicke and his colleagues, in a careful series of observations in the 1960s (employing up-to-date methods of servo control and observation), found that the weak equivalence principle held to about one part in 1011 for the attraction of the Sun on gold and aluminum. A later experiment by the Russian researcher Vladimir Braginski, with very different experimental arrangements, gave a limit of about one part in 1012 for platinum and aluminum.

Galileo’s supposed experiment of dropping objects from the Leaning Tower of Pisa has been reproduced in the laboratory with apparatuses used to determine the absolute value of gravity by timing a falling body. Two objects, one of uranium, the other of copper, were timed as they fell. No difference was detected.

Quote
By the start of the 21st century, all observations and experiments on gravitation had detected that there are no deviations from the deductions of general relativity, that the weak principle of equivalence is valid, and that the inverse square law holds over distances from a few centimetres to thousands of kilometres. Coupled with observations of electromagnetic signals passing close to the Sun and of images formed by gravitational lenses, those observations and experiments make it very clear that general relativity provides the only acceptable description of gravitation at the present time.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: markjo on May 03, 2019, 11:09:19 PM
If you can find some experiments that do claim to see deviations, I'm happy to put it in the Wiki in support of CG. I don't really care either way. What I found when I went looking for them, provided in the Variations of Gravity page, suggest that there are no deviations.
If you couldn't find any experiments showing variations, it's because you didn't look very hard.  This is an experiment so simple that literally anyone with an accurate enough scale can perform themselves.  The Kern Gnome Experiment (http://gnome-experiment.com/) is one such experiment that has been presented and discussed several times.

Here is another experiment using a jewelry scale and a tungsten reference mass:
https://www.metabunk.org/codys-lab-how-weight-changes-with-location-and-velocity.t8783/

Now, whether those variations are due to celestial gravitation or other influences is a different matter. 

BTW, according to RET, the gravitational effects of the sun and moon are too small to be measured by anything but the most sensitive gravimeters.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: markjo on May 03, 2019, 11:24:44 PM
I did check other sources. The claims are based on theory, not experiment. Here is another source which does talk about the experiments:

https://www.britannica.com/science/gravity-physics/Experimental-study-of-gravitation

Aside from the Gravimeters (Sismometers) and the Cavendish Experiment (inconsistent short range experiments), which is addressed on our Wiki, the Encyclopedia Britannica seems to agree that there are no variations in gravity:
Tom, that Britannica article is talking about capital 'G' (universal gravitational constant), not little 'g' (acceleration due to gravity).  The two are very different and should not be confused. 
https://www.nextgurukul.in/nganswers/ask-question/answer/What-is-difference-between-g-and-G/Gravitation/14878.htm
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 03, 2019, 11:33:21 PM
If you couldn't find any experiments showing variations, it's because you didn't look very hard.  This is an experiment so simple that literally anyone with an accurate enough scale can perform themselves.  The Kern Gnome Experiment (http://gnome-experiment.com/) is one such experiment that has been presented and discussed several times.

Here is another experiment using a jewelry scale and a tungsten reference mass:
https://www.metabunk.org/codys-lab-how-weight-changes-with-location-and-velocity.t8783/

I believe that we have discussed this in the past. Those aren't professional experiments from mainstream science. In the gnome experiment a scale calibrated for one area and then sent around to members of the public. A similar occurrence is happening in the other link.

(https://img.purch.com/w/660/aHR0cDovL3d3dy5saXZlc2NpZW5jZS5jb20vaW1hZ2VzL2kvMDAwLzAyNS82MTcvb3JpZ2luYWwva2Vybi1nb2xkZW4tZ2F0ZS0xMjAzMjEuanBn)

https://www.arlynscales.com/scale-knowledge/factors-can-affect-scales-accuracy/

Quote
    Factors That Can Affect Your Scale’s Accuracy

    ...

    Differences in air pressure – Scales can provide inaccurate measurements if the air pressure from the calibration environment is different than the operating environment.

In the scale experiments the scales are calibrated for one environment and taken to another. That the equator has a difference in pressure than the poles is well known.

Tom, that Britannica article is talking about capital 'G' (universal gravitational constant), not little 'g' (acceleration due to gravity).  The two are very different and should not be confused. 
https://www.nextgurukul.in/nganswers/ask-question/answer/What-is-difference-between-g-and-G/Gravitation/14878.htm

I disagree. The article makes no designation. The Universality of Free Fall and the Equivalence Principle says that gravity operates exactly as if the earth were accelerating upwards at constant acceleration. If there was a difference in the speed of gravity as an object fell, it would be a violation of the Weak Equivalence Principle. The WEP is constantly tested, and violations at any range or sensitivity have been searched for over the last several hundred years.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 04, 2019, 12:08:23 AM
Quote
BTW, according to RET, the gravitational effects of the sun and moon are too small to be measured by anything but the most sensitive gravimeters.

Look into what mainstream says about it. They acknowledge that those experiments should detect the gravity of the sun and say that it shows that there are "preferred curves" in spacetime that the bodies follow.

https://wiki.tfes.org/Variations_in_Gravity#Official_Explanation:_Selective_Gravity
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: markjo on May 04, 2019, 12:09:01 AM
Tom, that Britannica article is talking about capital 'G' (universal gravitational constant), not little 'g' (acceleration due to gravity).  The two are very different and should not be confused. 
https://www.nextgurukul.in/nganswers/ask-question/answer/What-is-difference-between-g-and-G/Gravitation/14878.htm

I disagree. The article makes no designation.
Of course it does.  It's quite obvious that they're talking about the constant of gravitation (capital 'G').
Quote from: https://www.britannica.com/science/gravity-physics/Experimental-study-of-gravitation
There also has been a continuing interest in the determination of the constant of gravitation, although it must be pointed out that G occupies a rather anomalous position among the other constants of physics. In the first place, the mass M of any celestial object cannot be determined independently of the gravitational attraction that it exerts. Thus, the combination GM, not the separate value of M, is the only meaningful property of a star, planet, or galaxy. Second, according to general relativity and the principle of equivalence, G does not depend on material properties but is in a sense a geometric factor.

The Universality of Free Fall and the Equivalence Principle says that gravity operates exactly as if the earth were accelerating upwards at constant acceleration. If there was a difference in the speed of gravity anywhere, it would be a violation of the Weak Equivalence Principle. The WEP is constantly tested, and violations at any range or sensitivity have been searched for over the last several hundred years.
We've been over this one too.  The EP only applies locally in a homogeneous gravitational field.  Tidal forces from outside influences invalidate any test of the EP.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: QED on May 04, 2019, 12:45:35 AM
I dont have to reference any experiment.

Then it appears that you have no argument.

Please reference an experiment for your idea that gravity varies by altitude. A lot of that is based on theory.

A tremendous plethora of data exists such that the variations across the the entire earths surface have been mapped several times.

https://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/k-4/features/F_Measuring_Gravity_With_Grace.html


Gravimeters are seismeters and operate under the theory of "gravity waves" and "infragravity waves". It's not a direct measurement of gravity: https://wiki.tfes.org/Gravimetry

Also, that's not an experiment for gravity by altitude.

Measuring gravity waves is a direct measurement of gravity. The theory of gravity includes gravity waves, so your objection is nonsensical.

Well of course it measures gravity by altitude. Did you read it? It also measures gravity fluctuations by local density variants. It is a very sophisticated measurement, and done very well I might add!
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: QED on May 04, 2019, 12:55:56 AM
If you couldn't find any experiments showing variations, it's because you didn't look very hard.  This is an experiment so simple that literally anyone with an accurate enough scale can perform themselves.  The Kern Gnome Experiment (http://gnome-experiment.com/) is one such experiment that has been presented and discussed several times.

Here is another experiment using a jewelry scale and a tungsten reference mass:
https://www.metabunk.org/codys-lab-how-weight-changes-with-location-and-velocity.t8783/

I believe that we have discussed this in the past. Those aren't professional experiments from mainstream science. In the gnome experiment a scale calibrated for one area and then sent around to members of the public. A similar occurrence is happening in the other link.

(https://img.purch.com/w/660/aHR0cDovL3d3dy5saXZlc2NpZW5jZS5jb20vaW1hZ2VzL2kvMDAwLzAyNS82MTcvb3JpZ2luYWwva2Vybi1nb2xkZW4tZ2F0ZS0xMjAzMjEuanBn)

https://www.arlynscales.com/scale-knowledge/factors-can-affect-scales-accuracy/

Quote
    Factors That Can Affect Your Scale’s Accuracy

    ...

    Differences in air pressure – Scales can provide inaccurate measurements if the air pressure from the calibration environment is different than the operating environment.

In the scale experiments the scales are calibrated for one environment and taken to another. That the equator has a difference in pressure than the poles is well known.

Tom, that Britannica article is talking about capital 'G' (universal gravitational constant), not little 'g' (acceleration due to gravity).  The two are very different and should not be confused. 
https://www.nextgurukul.in/nganswers/ask-question/answer/What-is-difference-between-g-and-G/Gravitation/14878.htm

I disagree. The article makes no designation. The Universality of Free Fall and the Equivalence Principle says that gravity operates exactly as if the earth were accelerating upwards at constant acceleration. If there was a difference in the speed of gravity as an object fell, it would be a violation of the Weak Equivalence Principle. The WEP is constantly tested, and violations at any range or sensitivity have been searched for over the last several hundred years.

There is no such thing as the speed of gravity, that sentence is unphysical.

We have discussed the equivalence principle before in the context of reconciling the lack of downward wind from a UA. You had incorrectly applied this principle to that situation as well, and I did you the courtesy of explaining your mistake, which you acknowledged by bowing out of the conversation.

I’m afraid in this context you are also incorrectly applying the principle, and in the exact same fashion.

It would be my pleasure to help you understand it better, so that future discussions are more fruitful for you.

To clarify, deviations in local gravity is not a violation of the equivalence principle. Your mistake is that you are implicitly transforming from one non-inertial reference frame to another non-inertial reference frame, without using the Lorentz transformation equations, so it makes sense that you would find a result that does not seem correct.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 04, 2019, 01:03:16 AM
Of course it does.  It's quite obvious that they're talking about the constant of gravitation (capital 'G').
Quote from: https://www.britannica.com/science/gravity-physics/Experimental-study-of-gravitation
There also has been a continuing interest in the determination of the constant of gravitation, although it must be pointed out that G occupies a rather anomalous position among the other constants of physics. In the first place, the mass M of any celestial object cannot be determined independently of the gravitational attraction that it exerts. Thus, the combination GM, not the separate value of M, is the only meaningful property of a star, planet, or galaxy. Second, according to general relativity and the principle of equivalence, G does not depend on material properties but is in a sense a geometric factor.

The article does not state that it is talking about a "big G" versus a "little g". The experiments are testing the acceleration of bodies in free fall or the attraction from external gravity.

Quote from: QED
We have discussed the equivalence principle before in the context of reconciling the lack of downward wind from a UA. You had incorrectly applied this principle to that situation as well, and I did you the courtesy of explaining your mistake, which you acknowledged by bowing out of the conversation

As I recall in that conversation you were backed into a corner, essentially claiming that if the earth was not rotating that the weight of the air would constantly increase on the surface of the earth. I don't see the need to engage with that.

If you believe that there would be a difference in a container of air accelerating upwards and "gravity", then I would suggest that you read up on the equivalence principle. It's the same. Your response was "but the earth is rotating!" The rotation of the earth does not keep the air pressure or weight on the surface of the earth from constantly increasing. Refrain from rediculous discussions.

I had assumed that you saw your error, but I guess not. Do please tell us all about how, if the earth were not rotating, that air pressure or weight would constantly increase on the surface of the earth.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: QED on May 04, 2019, 02:50:06 AM
Of course it does.  It's quite obvious that they're talking about the constant of gravitation (capital 'G').
Quote from: https://www.britannica.com/science/gravity-physics/Experimental-study-of-gravitation
There also has been a continuing interest in the determination of the constant of gravitation, although it must be pointed out that G occupies a rather anomalous position among the other constants of physics. In the first place, the mass M of any celestial object cannot be determined independently of the gravitational attraction that it exerts. Thus, the combination GM, not the separate value of M, is the only meaningful property of a star, planet, or galaxy. Second, according to general relativity and the principle of equivalence, G does not depend on material properties but is in a sense a geometric factor.

The article does not state that it is talking about a "big G" versus a "little g". The experiments are testing the acceleration of bodies in free fall or the attraction from external gravity.

Quote from: QED
We have discussed the equivalence principle before in the context of reconciling the lack of downward wind from a UA. You had incorrectly applied this principle to that situation as well, and I did you the courtesy of explaining your mistake, which you acknowledged by bowing out of the conversation

As I recall front that conversation you were backed into a corner, essentially claiming that if the earth was not rotating that the weight of the air would constantly increase on the surface of the earth. I don't see the need to engage with that.

If you believe that there would be a difference in a container of air accelerating upwards and "gravity", then I would suggest that you read up on the equivalence principle. It's the same. Your response was "but the earth is rotating!" The rotation of the earth does not keep the air pressure or weight on the surface of the earth from constantly increasing. Refrain from rediculous discussions.

I had assumed that you saw your error, but I guess not. Do please tell us all about how, if the earth were not rotating, that air pressure or weight would constantly increase on the surface of the earth.

A nice try. After your marble analogy failed, you floundered, and almost hysterically asked me how the two scenarios could possibly be different. I explained how a rotating earth is different than the inside of a rocket ship!

Which was quite easy to do, Tom.

I then proceeded to explain how that difference not only supported the equivalence principle, but also resulted in weather on our planet (you got that for free).

Then I finished by underlining step-by-step how, in fact, it was your scenario that violated the equivalence principle.

You then disappeared.

Welcome back though! I look forward to picking up where we left off! Have you found some new possible workarounds?
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 04, 2019, 02:56:47 AM
Your argument was that with UA that the weight of the atmosphere would constantly increase. This is wrong. There is no difference between a container filled with air accelerating upwards and a container being pulled down by gravity. See the Equivalence Principle. Your rebuttal of "but the earth is rotating!!" is quite odd, and incorrect. The rotation of the earth in RE does not prevent the weight of the atmosphere from constantly increasing.

Please justify your assertion.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: QED on May 04, 2019, 12:07:57 PM
Your argument was that with UA that the weight of the atmosphere would constantly increase. This is wrong. There is no difference between a container filled with air accelerating upwards and a container being pulled down by gravity. See the Equivalence Principle. Your rebuttal of "but the earth is rotating!!" is quite odd, and incorrect. The rotation of the earth in RE does not prevent the weight of the atmosphere from constantly increasing.

Please justify your assertion.

This is moving backwards. We left the conversation having attended to this point already. Please review the conversation previously, and return here with an updated question.

The conversation was a week ago, so I suppose it’s possible you have just forgotten. Honestly, given your previous myriad diversionary discussion tactics, it is difficult for me to trust this is due to a poor memory rather than self-imposed selective amnesia intended to frustrate progress in the debate.

You seem to have no difficulty remembering old points that you believe support your position.

I’ll be here when you get back. I’m not going anyway.

Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 04, 2019, 03:34:48 PM
That is exactly what you said. It is right here:

You are describing a violation of the equivalence principle. A container filled with gas will behave the same under gravity or under upwards acceleration. Gradually increase the size of that container and it behaves the same. There isn't a point where it suddenly violates the equivalence principle.

I agree. But a RE is not a container like a spaceship. It is also rotating, and so one must account for the effects of rotational drag, which is precisely why we have weather!

What I am saying is that on a FE, we would not have this rotation, and so the equivalence principle would indeed be violated - because we do not feel increasing pressure like we would on a space ship.

Now again, please justify your absurdity. You are suggesting that if the earth were not rotating the weight of the atmosphere would continually increase.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: QED on May 04, 2019, 04:14:10 PM
That is exactly what you said. It is right here:

You are describing a violation of the equivalence principle. A container filled with gas will behave the same under gravity or under upwards acceleration. Gradually increase the size of that container and it behaves the same. There isn't a point where it suddenly violates the equivalence principle.

I agree. But a RE is not a container like a spaceship. It is also rotating, and so one must account for the effects of rotational drag, which is precisely why we have weather!

What I am saying is that on a FE, we would not have this rotation, and so the equivalence principle would indeed be violated - because we do not feel increasing pressure like we would on a space ship.

Now again, please justify your absurdity. You are suggesting that if the earth were not rotating the weight of the atmosphere would continually increase.

Yes indeed. Go ahead and copypasta me previous replies as well. It isn’t all in there. We had an entire conversation, and you are referencing my last reply and saying it does not contain the information of the entire conversation.

Absurdly, and anecdotally, this is what AG Barr did during the congressional hearing: piecemealing the totality until any one section was not convincing on its own. Don’t do that!
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: Tom Bishop on May 04, 2019, 04:42:59 PM
The comments prior to that are just of you claiming that the weight of the atmosphere would continuously increase with UA.

Since you wanted to continue that conversation by bringing it up, please enlighten us on why the rotation of the earth prevents the weight of the air at sea level from continuously increasing. I am sure that many others in our community would like to know.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: manicminer on May 04, 2019, 09:41:29 PM
Since air is not a solid but a combination of different gases I am not sure you can say that air has a weight as such. Rather it has a number density (number of particles per unit volume). That will be greater near the surface and less the higher you reach in altitude. That is what people mean when they describe the air as being more 'rarified' at higher altitude. There are less oxygen atoms per unit volume as you get higher which is why people start to suffer with altitude sickness at 8000ft or higher.

It is more correct to describe the pressure of the air, and needless to say air pressure is greater at the surface because of a summative effect from gravity coming from below and the pressure of air particles higher up pushing down on the particles nearer the surface.  I would also expect air pressure at the surface to be on average slightly higher at the poles compared to the equator due to the lesser effect of the Earths rotation.
Title: Re: Celestial Gravitation
Post by: WellRoundedIndividual on May 04, 2019, 11:24:53 PM
Whether or not you believe in CG and UA, the wiki is better now. Thank you, Tom for updating it. You may proceed to argue over whether you understand a gravimeter or not.