I simply can not get my head around gravity.

in #science7 years ago (edited)

Newtons law about gravity.

(According to Isaac Newton, an object in the room that gets a curved route / direction will create gravity)
Sir Isaac Newton.jpg
(Source: http://www.history.com/shows/the-universe/videos/beyond-the-big-bang-sir-isaac-newtons-law-of-gravity)

Its of course more then this.
But to me it only leaves me with more questions then answers.

It make me understand what create gravity and the effect it have.
But it still dont answer the most important question.
What is gravity exactly?

(the easy answer will of course be the sling effect)
but that is still a hollow answer if we want a serious scientific answer for it.

The sling effect alone should also make us less heavy on "the outer side" of the planet compare to "the inner side" of the planet, but that is not the case.

The fact is that the only geographic position on our planet that make any difference on our weight, is the distance from the center of the planet we are.
So your weight on top of a mountain will be a little lesser then it is in the bottom of the valley beside this mountain.(i believe)

There is also some other things that we should be able to measure if it only was Newtons laws that was the cause of things.
For example we should be able to see the difference on the weight of things when the Earth was closer to the sun, compare to when it is far away from it. (maybe it is too, and it is just me that have not read about it)
Just like we should be more heavy at day, compare to when the moon is strait above us.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton%27s_law_of_universal_gravitation

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One thing led to another.
And by asking my self this questions, i have now realised that i need to learn more about:

  1. Algebra
  2. Calculus
  3. Classical mechanics
  4. electrodynamics

When i have learned at least the basics about this things,
then i probably will be able to ask more sensible questions..

But my curiosity have at least lead me to the right track i have to take to get closer to the answer of my question, so i am grateful. :)

Yes. Your ans is correct correct and you won. I have resteemed this post and also upvoted. thanks @rezpatex

I don't have a scientific background. But if it helps:

Newton's laws don't tell us what gravity is. They just describe what gravity does. And they only do that in very limited situations.

Say you need to pick someone out of a lineup. There's five guys, and one girl. All I need to tell you to pick the girl is, simply, 'the suspect is a girl.' There.

I haven't told you everything about her. Just enough to describe her for our particular situation. That's Newton's laws...actually, that's nearly all scientific theories. They work very well for specific situations, but there's always some extreme situation in which the laws break down. And that's usually a sign that you need an updated set of laws.

To further the analogy, if the lineup is all female, telling you 'the suspect is a girl' just isn't going to cut it. Now you need descriptors - hair color, eye color, height, weight, ethnicity, etc. You need things to get more detailed and complicated.

Gravity is one of those 'more detailed and complicated' situations.

The best explanation, as far as I know, came from Einstein. He described gravity as a disturbance in the fabric of space. Which makes some sense - gravity acts at a great distance. Other forces do not. It acts proportional to mass - i.e., if an object is more dense and bigger, it attracts other objects with greater strength.

Picture a golf ball and a bowling ball on a bed. They will both indent the covers, but the bowling ball will also indent the mattress. Now picture a marble rolling next to either the golf or the bowling ball. The marble's path will be altered slightly by the golf ball's indentation, and much more by the bowling ball's indentation.

It's hard to picture a 3-dimensional fabric of space, but the math to describe the bed and gravity is nearly the same.

Thank you for your answer.

I have seen the explanations for the "madras" example, but i believe they describe 2 different forces.

And i have also read/seen many many descriptions from people who try to explain Einstein`s theories, but it have become clear to me that most of them have misunderstood him.
That is why there for example is many people who actually believe that Einstein said we could travel in time, almost like Doctor who, because they did not understand that it was one of the effects of light he was talking about.

So to avoid all those misunderstood explanations for Einstein`s theories, i have decided to read his original writings my self.

But those who believe they can just start to read those papers, and understand what he actually said, have probably never tried to do that.
To be able to read those and actually understand what he said, one need a lot of background knowledge.

One of the first things i discovered that i fully need to understand before i can understand his writings, was electrodynamics.
But to be able to understand electrodynamics again, it is necessary to understand Algebra, calculus and classical mechanics..
So that is what i am reading my self up on now, to be able to go on reading his papers.

And my guess is that when i fully understand this things, i probably will have to learn even more things to understand his next chapter.. lol

But i know it will be worth it in the end.

But for now, i have learned that it is a must to fully understand Algebra, Calculus, Classical mechanics and electrodynamics just to be able to understand the first chapter.. ;)

Simplified explanations on Einstein or Bohr`s paper work are almost doomed to be both wrong and misunderstood.