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In free space, far away from any influential gravity, if I were to shoot a
gun (bullet starts at 1000 ft/sec., or hit a golf ball with my driver, or even throw a baseball (you can plug in the arbitrary numbers for the initial acceleration), how far will these aforementioned objects travel? Will their speed EVER change? I know that this is probably a sophomoric question for most of you, but please indulge me. Thank you. Cordially, west |
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Hi West,
Assume for a moment that you could be far enough away from the influence of gravity - and remain so - then yes, it will continue to travel in a straight-line (assuming flat space in the absence of gravity) for ever until an external force it applied from something. However, gravity knows no limit and thus there would be no place in the known universe where the influence of gravity would be null. Maybe extremely small - but then the concept of size (field strength) would be relative. Thus the answer would be that gravitational forces would alter the motion - though it might not be obvious to an observer for quite some time. Then there's the concern of magnetic influences - but that's for later. -- Thanks, Jeffrey Physics and Astronomy Columbia, South Carolina http://midlandstech.com/jlh "west" wrote in message news:Lkhmh.8441$tc5.6618@trnddc01... In free space, far away from any influential gravity, if I were to shoot a gun (bullet starts at 1000 ft/sec., or hit a golf ball with my driver, or even throw a baseball (you can plug in the arbitrary numbers for the initial acceleration), how far will these aforementioned objects travel? Will their speed EVER change? I know that this is probably a sophomoric question for most of you, but please indulge me. Thank you. Cordially, west |
#3
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On or about 2007-01-02,
Jeff Hopkins atomic58 illuminated us with: Hi West, Assume for a moment that you could be far enough away from the influence of gravity - and remain so - then yes, it will continue to travel in a straight-line (assuming flat space in the absence of gravity) for ever until an external force it applied from something. However, gravity knows no limit and thus there would be no place in the known universe where the influence of gravity would be null. Maybe extremely small - but then the concept of size (field strength) would be relative. OK, the pedant in me wonders whether there might indeed be null gravity at a few points in the universe? Obviously mid-way between two large identical masses, the gravity effect of each cancels the other out. Might there not be to occasional spot in the real universe where the net gravity is zero? Granted it doesn't actually affect your answer to the original question as we have a moving object and it will eventually encounter gravity as you say. -- Mark Real email address | Giraffiti: is mark at | Concrete art, spray-painted very, very high. ayliffe dot org | |
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Hi Mark,
Yes, you could be right - in all seriousness, such a possibility exists that there might be a true null point somewhere at sometime. Perhaps even a null region ... but based upon the assumption of a great deal of mass distributed throughout the known universe in a somewhat random pattern coupled with the fact that all of this mass is in motion would strongly hint against the likelihood of a null point existing since the gravitational fields themselves would be changing in strength nearly constantly. So a null region would even be less likely. I hope this example coming up it not too weak, but imagine a city pool with 20 to 30 children playing in it. The pool's surface would be in a state of constant motion at all times - do some degree - and though the waves in some location may momentarily cancel out leaving that region of the pool smooth - it should not last long with the kids not only splashing (gravity) but moving around at the same time (gravity waves). -- Thanks, Jeffrey Physics and Astronomy Columbia, South Carolina http://midlandstech.com/jlh "Mark Ayliffe" wrote in message ... On or about 2007-01-02, Jeff Hopkins atomic58 illuminated us with: Hi West, Assume for a moment that you could be far enough away from the influence of gravity - and remain so - then yes, it will continue to travel in a straight-line (assuming flat space in the absence of gravity) for ever until an external force it applied from something. However, gravity knows no limit and thus there would be no place in the known universe where the influence of gravity would be null. Maybe extremely small - but then the concept of size (field strength) would be relative. OK, the pedant in me wonders whether there might indeed be null gravity at a few points in the universe? Obviously mid-way between two large identical masses, the gravity effect of each cancels the other out. Might there not be to occasional spot in the real universe where the net gravity is zero? Granted it doesn't actually affect your answer to the original question as we have a moving object and it will eventually encounter gravity as you say. -- Mark Real email address | Giraffiti: is mark at | Concrete art, spray-painted very, very high. ayliffe dot org | |
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Jeff Hopkins wrote:
Hi Mark, Yes, you could be right - in all seriousness, such a possibility exists that there might be a true null point somewhere at sometime. Perhaps even a null region ... but based upon the assumption of a great deal of mass distributed throughout the known universe in a somewhat random pattern coupled with the fact that all of this mass is in motion would strongly hint against the likelihood of a null point existing since the gravitational fields themselves would be changing in strength nearly constantly. So a null region would even be less likely. I reckon there must be such a point, at the centre of mass of the universe. |
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Andy Guthrie wrote:
Jeff Hopkins wrote: Hi Mark, Yes, you could be right - in all seriousness, such a possibility exists that there might be a true null point somewhere at sometime. Perhaps even a null region ... but based upon the assumption of a great deal of mass distributed throughout the known universe in a somewhat random pattern coupled with the fact that all of this mass is in motion would strongly hint against the likelihood of a null point existing since the gravitational fields themselves would be changing in strength nearly constantly. So a null region would even be less likely. I reckon there must be such a point, at the centre of mass of the universe. As I understand such things, this above presumes, that the Universe is finite (to be able to have a center of mass) - but to my knowledge it is not known if it actually is finite or not ... Claudio |
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Claudio Grondi wrote:
Andy Guthrie wrote: Jeff Hopkins wrote: Hi Mark, Yes, you could be right - in all seriousness, such a possibility exists that there might be a true null point somewhere at sometime. Perhaps even a null region ... but based upon the assumption of a great deal of mass distributed throughout the known universe in a somewhat random pattern coupled with the fact that all of this mass is in motion would strongly hint against the likelihood of a null point existing since the gravitational fields themselves would be changing in strength nearly constantly. So a null region would even be less likely. I reckon there must be such a point, at the centre of mass of the universe. As I understand such things, this above presumes, that the Universe is finite (to be able to have a center of mass) - but to my knowledge it is not known if it actually is finite or not ... Finite but unbounded ? I would still say there would have to be a point of gravitational equilibrium, just as there is certainly a point somewhere on the Earth's surface where the wind speed must be zero. |
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Claudio Grondi wrote:
As I understand such things, this above presumes, that the Universe is finite (to be able to have a center of mass) - but to my knowledge it is not known if it actually is finite or not ... Claudio Didn't Einstein say that no point of the universe can be considered special? Surely the actual phyical centre of the universe, arrived at by pure geometry, would look like, and have the properties of, any other point chosen at random. Gravity is an inverse square field but can never be said to be zero, however far away from a given mass you are. Two objects orbiting each other can have a point between them that is gravitationally null but this orbits with them (lagrange 1 i think). Hardly "gravity free if your orbiting with a binary system... any other nulls would be fleeting indeed as objects not orbiting each other (if that can ever be said between any two objects in our universe) follow their own paths in spacetime and move relative to each other. If you watch a field drop to null then climb again you can slice the time segments to ever finer degrees until the null happens as a point and not an event making these nulls exeedingly, if not infinitly small. Les -- Remove Frontal Lobes to reply direct. "The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak ; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal , genocidal , filicidal , pestilential , megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully" (Richard Dawkins) http://armsofmorpheus.blogspot.com/ http://www.richarddawkins.net/index.php Les Hemmings a.a #2251 SA |
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