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Science & Technology
What exactly is gravity?
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<blockquote data-quote="Einstein" data-source="post: 200825" data-attributes="member: 288"><p>You know me by now. I'll take an observable fact over make believe bullshit any day of the week. </p><p></p><p>I have an interesting observable fact that further complicates what gravity is. Centrifugal force is a center fleeing force. In fact for brief periods of time at amusement parks, some of the rides actually allow you to experience the nullification of gravity forces. Apparently centrifugal force seems to direct a spinning objects weight in directions other than downward. Mainly outward from the spinning object. An object in earth orbit follows a circular path around the earth in a weightless state. Its centrifugal force exactly counters its gravitational weight. So a spinning gyroscope here on the earth should actually lose some of its weight as the gyro spin redirects the spinning portion of its weight outwards. Yet doing this experiment on a lab scale shows otherwise. The scale shows almost the full objects weight. A very very small amount of weight is missing. Not the amount expected. </p><p></p><p>Those are real facts that you can verify for yourself. </p><p></p><p>Going beyond this info to the next step does suggest that there is at least one more additional force contributing to the phenomena of gravity.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Einstein, post: 200825, member: 288"] You know me by now. I'll take an observable fact over make believe bullshit any day of the week. I have an interesting observable fact that further complicates what gravity is. Centrifugal force is a center fleeing force. In fact for brief periods of time at amusement parks, some of the rides actually allow you to experience the nullification of gravity forces. Apparently centrifugal force seems to direct a spinning objects weight in directions other than downward. Mainly outward from the spinning object. An object in earth orbit follows a circular path around the earth in a weightless state. Its centrifugal force exactly counters its gravitational weight. So a spinning gyroscope here on the earth should actually lose some of its weight as the gyro spin redirects the spinning portion of its weight outwards. Yet doing this experiment on a lab scale shows otherwise. The scale shows almost the full objects weight. A very very small amount of weight is missing. Not the amount expected. Those are real facts that you can verify for yourself. Going beyond this info to the next step does suggest that there is at least one more additional force contributing to the phenomena of gravity. [/QUOTE]
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What exactly is gravity?
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