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On 10 Okt., 06:57, Aardvark wrote:
Obviously the ping-pong ball overwhelmed the fragile minds of many of the posters here (I only used it as strictly a focusing device, but far far too many poor souls here were simply dumbfounded by a ping-pong ball inside the Sun and wrecked their brains over how it was reacting in there). And this in spite of my warning then that if they didn't have a mind they ought not try to work their way through my [sic.] "mind" experiment. Forget the ping-pong ball guys: I only chose it, instead of a golf ball, say, because it (too) most ironically is hollow. Now, consider, instead: Superman and The Sun Experiment. [A thought experiment--further simplified now for those who just cannot get past the ping-pong ball of the original experiment.] NOTE: This is happening in an universe in which gravity behaves as everybody thinks it does (Newton, Einstein, & you): And, why Superman? Because not only is Superman immune to gravity, while still able to feel it (we've often seen him just floating about in many of his movies but we've never seen him floating away every time he closes his eyes)... but he is also actually strengthened by the rays of our yellow Sun--Therefore he actually becomes most superest of all INSIDE the Sun! The problem, of course was: getting a hold of him. Luckily I knew where Lois Lane worked and gave her a ring, in exchange for which she quickly agreed to help me meet him (Superman--By the way, his name is Super Man not "Joey Superman" or other, it's just that he's not uppity and never insists he be called MISTER Man): I very quickly explained the nature of my experiment to Super Man, and he agreed to undertake to travel to the center of the Sun for the sake of those poor souls who would never grasp the meaning/purpose of this thought experiment because they had been struck dumb by the only thing they were able to see from that instant onwards, namely the bouncing ping- pong ball. --Your announcer is Mr. Maxwell Smart: BEGIN THOUGHT EXPERIMENT Now: Imagine Superman approaching the surface of the Sun. As he does so he feels the pull of the Sun's gravity gradually increasing. [When he is at the Sun's surface, or pretty near it, Superman will feel the pull of the Sun's gravity to be at its maximum.] The instant Superman plunges past the surface of the Sun, he will feel the pull of the Sun's gravity begin to decrease. And it will continue to decrease as he flies towards the Sun's center. [This is because as Superman travels closer and closer to the center of the Sun: the amount of Sun mass pulling on him is decreasing, all the time that there will be a growing amount of Sun- mass behind him pulling back on his super body. We can set aside the Sun mass to the sides, but we must still subtract it from the "pulling" mass.] Once Superman reaches the center of the Sun he will feel either no gravity there (or very little if any); and, if he so wishes, he can lie there forever just floating about impervious to all INCLUDING gravity (at the exact center of a great hollow which There is no great hollow in the center of the sun. At least that's what the laws of gravity and gas dynamics tell us. the laws of gravity tell us will be found thereabouts because most of the matter at the center of the Sun will have been "pulled" away from its center There is no "pulling away" from the center taking place. As soon as you are 1mm off the center of a rotationally symmetric body, in effect the mass of the 1mm ball inside that radius pulls you in. The force may be small, but it is directed towards the center. [there may remain a single hydrogen atom at the exact gravitational center of this hollow... but certainly during 5 billion years of "pulling" most other atoms will have been pulled aside because they could NOT also be at the exact gravitational center unless they were one system, of course. If there is a perfect hollow it is because its "left inner wall surface" is under MORE gravitational pull from the left wall than from the right wall (on the other side of that hollow): There may be as much mass in the right wall of The Great Hollow as in the left wall of The Great Hollow, yes, but the mass of the left wall of The Great Hollow is obviously closer to the "left inner wall surface" [to quote a certain Mr. Rodrian]. Consider a thin double cone centered around a point in your "hollow" and a single spherical layer of sun material. On the "left" the cone intersects the layer at distance a and on the right at distance b. Hence the mass that is cut out is a factor times a^2 on the left and the same factor times b^2 on the right. Since the gravitational force is proportional to mass divided by distance squared, we see that the two slices cancel: a^2 / a^2 = b^2 / b^2. Put a lot of tiny double cones together to find that the sun matter outside the radius of your probe point causes no force whatsoever, esp. not outward. Or Superman can, as he did, leave the inside of the Sun to report on his findings. I am sure that many posters here would have wanted me to ask Superman why he wears his yellowing underwear on the outside of his pants and neat-o stuff like that--but he suddenly had to fly off, as he saw that Lois, in reaching for an aspirin, had swallowed a suicide pill she was doing a story on instead and died. Now Superman would have to travel back in time a couple of hours to save her... yet again! [Thank you Mister Smart.] END THOUGHT EXPERIMENT Now, what are the implications of this thought experiment? [Hint: They have nothing whatever to do with Superman, and, nor with Lois Lane either.] 1. From the size of the Sun brainiacs've calculated that the only place in it where there's enough gravitational pressure to produce fusion is in a relatively compact central core. Most of the Sun is just plasma so loosely flying about that it's hard for enough matter to be brought close enough for atoms & stuff like that to smash together in order to sustain a fusion chain-reaction. 2. The only method brainiacs know of to produce the required pressures is if gravity is trying to push all the mass of the Sun into its very core. 3. And yet, as illustrated by Superman's voyage, the very laws of gravity tell us that once you start getting closer and closer to such a central core, the gravitational pressure should steadily decrease rather than increase: The particles close to the center are pulled downwards a little by gravity, but also by the pressure of the outer layers - these are quite heavy and also passing along te pressure from the yet further out layers. a very substantial mass of the Sun ought to be moving away from its central core. By what force? Now, most posters here will probably wish to know if I asked Super Man for his autograph or something like that. But, not for those posters but, for those persons with a mind, some very deeply fundamental questions about reality will now have to be addressed: 1. Is the Sun the result of gravity, as we have heretofore understood gravity? Obviously 2. Obviously there exists the required pressure at the Sun's core for fusion to occur, or the Sun would not be ON. 3. How does that pressure come to be, if the laws of gravity as we understand them tell us it ought not exist there! Ex falsum quodlibet, i.e. you might as well ask How does the pressure come to be if pigs can fly! This is certainly a self-contradiction the existence of which is telling us something very profound about the nature of how we understand reality (apparently we are misunderstanding it somewhere/somehow). Is this the pluralis auctoris? That "we" must refer to you alone. CONTINUANCE: These are two self-excluding viewpoints: One of them can be correct and is obtained by a few simple thoughts about the laws of physics (or even a rough approximation like Newton) while the other one is not. But both of them cannot be correct at the same time: Either gravity exists AND the center of the Sun (of every star) is hollow. There is no reason to assume the sun hollow, in fact that would contradict the laws of physics as we know them Or fusion DOES indeed take place at the center of the stars because the center of every star is its region of maximum pressure--and therefore the effect of gravity is "somehow" negated/voided inside the stars. * maximum pressure - zero gravity, so what? |
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