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Interesting Physics Phenomena
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<blockquote data-quote="Einstein" data-source="post: 180567" data-attributes="member: 288"><p>What I found so interesting was that no one used any of the advanced measuring tools we have at our disposal to gather data while the slinky begins its collapse. A gravitational body undergoing a gravitational acceleration becomes weightless. Would sensors attached to the slinky at various points along the collapse show weightlessness? The bottom of the slinky stands still. Is the bottom weightless or does it have weight?</p><p></p><p>The whole phenomena looks like new information we could add to wave phenomena. And quite possibly a round about way to understand what Ed Leedskalnin understood in order to build Coral Castle.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Einstein, post: 180567, member: 288"] What I found so interesting was that no one used any of the advanced measuring tools we have at our disposal to gather data while the slinky begins its collapse. A gravitational body undergoing a gravitational acceleration becomes weightless. Would sensors attached to the slinky at various points along the collapse show weightlessness? The bottom of the slinky stands still. Is the bottom weightless or does it have weight? The whole phenomena looks like new information we could add to wave phenomena. And quite possibly a round about way to understand what Ed Leedskalnin understood in order to build Coral Castle. [/QUOTE]
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