DaveMan
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Could someone tell me what gravity is, and what is the proof that gravity exists?
The discussion revolves around the nature of gravity, its existence, and the evidence supporting it. Participants explore various aspects of gravity, including its effects on massless particles like light, the relationship between gravity and time, and theoretical concepts such as shielding gravity.
Participants express a range of views on the nature of gravity, its effects, and related concepts. There is no consensus on several points, including the existence of gravitons and the possibility of shielding gravity.
Participants mention various experiments and theoretical ideas, but there are limitations in understanding and definitions, particularly regarding the nature of massless particles and the implications of gravity on time.
Einstein's theory of general relativity describes gravitation as a result of the curvature of spacetime. All objects, even massless photons, move along the straightest possible lines in this curved space. The straightest possible lines in a curved space, however, and not "straight" like lines drawn on a plane.Originally posted by DaveMan
I don't get it, how can light with no mass, or photons with no mass be affected by gravity?
Yes. This is why gravity is referred to as the only "universal" interaction: it acts on everything.
No, time is shown by experimentation to be variable.Originally posted by StarkyDee
if Time is viewed as an interaction, couldn't this also be a universal determinate?
Is it so much easier to understand how gravity affects something with mass?Originally posted by DaveMan
I don't get it, how can light with no mass, or photons with no mass be affected by gravity?
Originally posted by Ambitwistor
You can shield a room from electromagnetic effects, but you can't shield a room from gravitational effects.
Maybe you're thinking about the *ahem* work (?) of Eugene Podkletnov?Originally posted by LURCH
Wasn't there some talk of BEC's shielding gravity? Thought I heard somrthing along those lines recently, though it still strains my credulity.