John Connor
Lifer
If E=Mc^2 then how do we describe gravity? Isn't gravity a form of energy or is it just considered a force? Or does the equation describe gravity?
\If E=Mc^2 then how do we describe gravity? Isn't gravity a form of energy or is it just considered a force? Or does the equation describe gravity?
Technically it would be drawn to whatever the most massive object in the vicinity is, as well as 'falling' toward the earth, so potentially it'd be drawn to your body (albeit slowly). Note that you would hit the bottom of the elevator before any substantial amount of force was exerted on the ball toward your direction.\
There is no gravity for free falling bodies, like in space. If you are in an elevator which is in free fall and drop a ball held in your hand, there is no "pull" on the ball, which will stay in its position relative to you.
I'd be interested in seeing the evidence about the E=MC2 theory.a) It's 99.99899% certain that Poincare knew and had published E=Mc^2 for strictly limited distribution about 25 years before AlbertE plagiarized him. (Why do you think Albert didn't provide any footnoted credits to those he "borrowed" from? Same as Isaac Newton stealing calculus from Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Same as Charles Darwin (I visited his boyhood house last week) ripping off a whole lotta predecessor guys who PUBLISHED everything Darwin said, about 100 years sooner. )
b) It'll probably be hundreds, if not thousands of years until we widely recognize the semiconscious property of light (aware but not self-aware). Understanding gravity will follow, maybe hundreds or thousands of years after that.
You are drastically underestimating the rate at which we are developing and discovering knowledge and information. It's an exponential relationship, which is why we've already learned more in this century than the entire 20th century. I'm sure we won't have a solid understanding in the next decade, but thousands of years? That's way too long. Half of this shit was discovered less than 100 years ago and we are already making a ton of progress. Is it a drop in the bucket? Yes, but exponential relationships tend to behave that way and it's not obvious unless you take a big step back to examine the big picture.a) It's 99.99899% certain that Poincare knew and had published E=Mc^2 for strictly limited distribution about 25 years before AlbertE plagiarized him. (Why do you think Albert didn't provide any footnoted credits to those he "borrowed" from? Same as Isaac Newton stealing calculus from Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Same as Charles Darwin (I visited his boyhood house last week) ripping off a whole lotta predecessor guys who PUBLISHED everything Darwin said, about 100 years sooner. )
b) It'll probably be hundreds, if not thousands of years until we widely recognize the semiconscious property of light (aware but not self-aware). Understanding gravity will follow, maybe hundreds or thousands of years after that.
that equation expresses maximum energy obtainable from mass. it doesnt express gravity the same way that it doesn't predict the weather - the two are not connected.