Film, Media & TV1 min ago
There Was Nothing, A Great Void, Absolutely Nothing...
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Then there was a big bang and the ejecta was propelled faster than the speed of light to fill the cosmos.
And some would say that my simple faith is far fetched. Is the account of the creation in Geneses any more unlikely than the scientific alternatives?
And some would say that my simple faith is far fetched. Is the account of the creation in Geneses any more unlikely than the scientific alternatives?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'd expect because you can weigh the two plates, calculate the force due to gravity between them (Newton's law would do) and then subtract any result of this off and you'd be left with an "excess" attraction. Thus, even if Gravity plays some role in bring the plates together, it doesn't play a large enough role to explain it. For that you need the Quantum Theory of ElectroDynamics that tells you there is a vacuum field that's being disrupted and adding a new force that explains the excess over gravity.
That's what I'd expect to be the case, anyway.
That's what I'd expect to be the case, anyway.
I should add that I'd be interested to find a definitive explanation of why gravity can be discounted or ignored, and it's an important question. The answer above is, I think, the correct one, and it seems like the experimenters have taken the force of gravity into account, though one or two sources would disagree. It might depends a lot on the precise experimental set-up. How heavy the plates being used are, etc.
What does weight have to do with it? I must be really stupid this morning. Weight is surely mass x g? no? So 2 bodies with mass will tend to attract each other.
@Jim I am sure you are probably correct that they would have taken it into account - i just did not see any mention of that, but I did not read all the references.
@Jim I am sure you are probably correct that they would have taken it into account - i just did not see any mention of that, but I did not read all the references.
I misunderstood your point then, Jom .But my question still stands. I imagine that Jim is correct in that the researchers will have accounted for gravity in their study design, but I saw no specific reference to that.
I have done more reading, and it seems the equations governing the casimir effect relate more to the surface area of the plates - the attraction increases as the area increases, rather than as their mass increases, and the amount of force described is rather different than if gravity was the culprit.
I did say I was being dumb this morning :)
I have done more reading, and it seems the equations governing the casimir effect relate more to the surface area of the plates - the attraction increases as the area increases, rather than as their mass increases, and the amount of force described is rather different than if gravity was the culprit.
I did say I was being dumb this morning :)
sandyRoe
Question Author
Is that a quote from a happy-clappy song?
http:// www.azl yrics.c om/lyri cs/plan etshake rs/noth ingisim possibl e.html
07:48 Fri 21st Mar 2014
No . . . although it does however regrettably support the assertion. :o/
Question Author
Is that a quote from a happy-clappy song?
http://
07:48 Fri 21st Mar 2014
No . . . although it does however regrettably support the assertion. :o/
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