Reversed Gravity: Antigravity Effects on Spacetime

  • Thread starter Thread starter abuguchie
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Gravity
AI Thread Summary
If gravity in the universe were made repulsive, all matter would begin to fly apart, particularly on planetary and larger scales. While humans might not immediately notice due to electromagnetic forces holding us together, the lack of gravity would cause planets to disintegrate and send us hurtling into space. The effects of reversed gravity would be more extreme than simply removing gravity, as objects would separate at a much faster rate. Planets under compression would likely explode upon the release of this force. Ultimately, the absence of gravity would lead to catastrophic consequences for life due to loss of atmosphere.
abuguchie
Messages
7
Reaction score
0
I've seen several posts on antigravity and theories on whether it can or cannot be a repulsive force as well as an attractive one.
My question is, what would happen if all gravity in the Universe was somehow made repulsive?how would that affect spacetime? Would everything remain exactly the same?
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
abuguchie said:
My question is, what would happen if all gravity in the Universe was somehow made repulsive?how would that affect spacetime? Would everything remain exactly the same?
Well, all matter would fly apart...
 
FtlIsAwesome said:
Well, all matter would fly apart...

Well, not exactly. On a smaller scale, like with humans, you probably wouldn't notice I suspect as the electromagnetic force keeps things together. On planetary and higher scales, however, things would definitely fly apart immediately. Our bodies wouldn't fly apart themselves but ... well, the planet would send us flying away!
 
We'd die from lack of atmosphere. :eek:


It'd be interesting to see a simulation of a planet blowing up due to reversed gravity. :cool:
Or a star. Or... etc etc.
 
Would it have the same effect as simply taking the gravity away?
 
abuguchie said:
Would it have the same effect as simply taking the gravity away?
Similar, but not quite. With repulsive gravity objects will fly apart much faster.
Planets would probably still explode if there was no gravity instead of reversed gravity. Because they are under a lot of compression and once that compression is released they'll fly apart.
In both situations we'd die from lack of air.
 
Is a homemade radio telescope realistic? There seems to be a confluence of multiple technologies that makes the situation better than when I was a wee lad: software-defined radio (SDR), the easy availability of satellite dishes, surveillance drives, and fast CPUs. Let's take a step back - it is trivial to see the sun in radio. An old analog TV, a set of "rabbit ears" antenna, and you're good to go. Point the antenna at the sun (i.e. the ears are perpendicular to it) and there is...
3I/ATLAS, also known as C/2025 N1 (ATLAS) and formerly designated as A11pl3Z, is an iinterstellar comet. It was discovered by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) station at Río Hurtado, Chile on 1 July 2025. Note: it was mentioned (as A11pl3Z) by DaveE in a new member's introductory thread. https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/brian-cox-lead-me-here.1081670/post-7274146 https://earthsky.org/space/new-interstellar-object-candidate-heading-toward-the-sun-a11pl3z/ One...
Back
Top