Peter, Drakkith,
I apologise for the delay in getting back to my own thread. I hope everyone enjoyed the SuperBowl in some manner. One of the most thrilling.
I had to think very carefully what to say next, since it seems I've opened a can of worms, perhaps due to my own struggle to understand. I thought the simplistic novel(?) idea that the expended total gravity of a single body seemed always equal to it's expended (not potential) emf for separation, was self-evident and perhaps even possible to extrapolate to all magnetic/inertial forces and space. It is a subtle thing, but apparently I may be mistaken in this assumption, that I am either dead wrong or it is just not easy to see.
Drakkith,
I wasn't thinking of EM radiation from a black hole, but rather the simple minimum spacing that all matter exhibits otherwise known as (planet/body/particle) mass density. The more the gravity, the more compacted the mass density in a given space. In a black hole, regarding "spacing" that is normally associated with EM forces, the density may be as much as infinite with no spacing. If all the universe were reduced to a single black hole, gravity should not be the weakest, but logically appear to win the dimensional force war against all associated combined electro forces. Of course we cannot literally see within to actually measure any internal density as infinite, balanced or otherwise.
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Peter,
I mentioned that total gravity may equal the total emf of the universe. I find it would be an extraordinarily useful ratio to contemplate if it did, but if neither Einstein, nor anyone else of similar bearing, has said something to this effect, the statement may not belong here on PF? I can't reference it directly either, but is it not at least reasonably symetric to SR by merely saying total energy (manifested in joules of force) must be equal to total mass (manifested in "equivalent" inertial forces)?
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Considering the above photo-diagram, when gravity split from all the other forces, is it thought to have split in equal proportion to the sum of the rest, or some other proportion, and how would we determine that in certainy? The photo is taken from
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/astro/unify.html .
Wes
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