AlbertCG93 said:
I don't think so, as I said, they're active dispositives; so, in fact, they would require energy to opperate, as far as I'm concerned.
... where from?
Presumably there is something catching the difference in momentum too ... basically, the part of the portal operation that makes it obey conservation of energy and momentum is hidden from the player.
You can test the pmm in-game by setting entry portal in the ground and firing an exit to the ceiling directly above, then dropping a cube through.
The cube will wizz by for a bit but is quickly ejected ... but the portals are not diminished in any way. They would need to be drawing energy from someplace.
Possibly, since only some surfaces support portals, the surface itself contains conduits for the portals to get their energy, with a large power source hidden someplace else.
Try attaching the coordinate system to the orange portal, see if the result is consistent.
Yet I think we can derive an insteresting discussion from my assertion, if you're willing to give it a look :)
What would make the discussion "interesting" in the scientific sense is if there is some way to test the ideas experimentally, within the game.
As it is, the long-fall boots are tricky enough... gravity does not appear to work the way we are used to.
Is it not possible to summarize your "assertion" so we don't have to follow links?
There are several flaws in reasoning - the most important I think being that you assert that the object emerges through the blue portal at the same rate that it enters the orange one but has "zero valued linear momentum" once it has completely emerged.
How does something emerge at speed but afterward have zero velocity?
Apparently the situation given in the problem statement is one that does not appear in the game (check?) ... if a portal were projected on a surface that moved in the direction of the portal, then the portal would, presumably, fail (This is what seems to happen in P1.10). The question posed in the problem statement does not arise. However, moving portals have been observed in portal 2, is that correct? Therefore an experiment to see if the portal motion (that would be relative motion between the endpoints) affects the velocity of the object passing through.