If I understand it right.
We experience the force of gravity across three dimensions currently because we live in three dimensions.
But Gravity exists across more than the three we can experience, that is the explanation of why the force of gravity is so weak compared to other forces...
Would the Gravitational force be applied equally across multiple dimensions or exponentially?
Could you measure the Gravitational force across 3 dimensions and the take that value divide by 3 and get the value of the gravitational force across 1 dimension?
Please clarify and tell me where I am wrong.
Before the big bang Time did not exist, nor mass, nor energy, nor velocity.
Or did they?
Thanks you for your help.
Thank you again.
I must turn off my dads computer or he will be angry.
I will move the rest of my questions to another forum as they have now evolved to another topic.
I will and thank you for all your time and assistance.
I promise I am learning.
just a question.. there may not be a True Rest Frame now.. but what about before.
Before the big bang when everything was in a finite space - would that not have been a True Rest Frame?
I actually meant a reference frame of absolute zero velocity.
Can there be a true "rest frame" Since everything has velocity in reference to something?
Please forgive me for mistakes I am learning.
If as an object approaches the speed of light it gains infinite mass then would an object in a absolute reference state have zero mass? (I understand the problems with an absolute reference state existing, but I am talking theory here)