Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Gravity

Speed is represented as:
Distance/Time= Speed
60 miles/ hour

And if gravity is a warping of space as Einstein described. Then it is differently but accurately described as a warping of distance. And if you change the distance in the above formula you will effectively change the speed induced.

So if gravity is (M)meters/second squared it is the product of space being warped around the planet and through an object that is falling around it. And if the front of you is in denser space and the back of you is in less dense space but all parts of your body are experiencing the same time lapse. Then you will have speed induced in yourself, from the (2)distance at the front of your body but the (1)distance at the back of your body meaning that the front of you will essentially be moving faster (in time or distance)than the back of you and you will then fall forward.
And even at a 0.00 starting speed a speed will be induced in you, as gravity.
Once you understand what causes distance or what causes time, you will understand what causes gravity.
My belief is that a static field looks and acts exactly the same as gravity. Not to mention the discovery by an astronaut that the planets first particles coalesced by the force of static charges, when he shook some salt in a bag in zero gravity. And what lots of people don't realize is that a positive charge will attract another positive charge if one of those charges is stronger than the other.
A more accurate equation needs to be determined such as Relative distance of an objects movement in 1 direction/Time=Speed
And if 2 objects were a distance apart but not moving there would be no speed because of no actual movement.
And you also need to constantly measure speed to be accurate because you could move intermittently or at 10 miles/hour then 5 miles /hour and then 20 miles /hour but end up at the destination in 1 hour anyway.
And also the equation needs to indicate direction because you could go west then up then east then down and end up at the destination anyway or never(as in driving as far in your car as far as it takes to get to the moon, but you never actually went to the moon).
Question: Do you get heavier or have more mass as you get closer to a gravitational field?

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