Belz...
Fiend God
I don't understand. If gravity pulled all matter together, space could not expand. It would contract.
It's the SPACE that's expanding, Herz. Remember the balloon analogy ?
I don't understand. If gravity pulled all matter together, space could not expand. It would contract.
Space expands together with spreading out matter. Space cannot expand without matter dispersing.It's the SPACE that's expanding, Herz. Remember the balloon analogy ?
General Relativity disagrees: Space exists independently of matter. There are solutions of GR that have no matter (De Sitter universe). The curvature of space and matter though are intimately connected.Right.
What I say is that first of all gravitation is not a local effect, but a large scale phenomena with infinite range. Secondly, I tried to say that matter creates space, without matter there's no space. If matter in Universe was pulled together on a cosmical scale, space would not be expanding but contracting, following matter.
What do you mean by "exists"? A mathematical solution of the field equations does not necessarily describe a universe that could ever come into existence. It's first of all a mathematical model.General Relativity disagrees: Space exists independently of matter. There are solutions of GR that have no matter (De Sitter universe). The curvature of space and matter though are intimately connected.
What do you mean by "close" together? The largest scales of structures are billions of light years.The effect of gravity is to cause matter that is close together to stay together regardless of the expansion of space. The amount of space between galaxies means that the force of gravity is weak enough so that the expansion of space dominates. We thus observe the cosmological redshift for galaxies.
In water, in orbit, in outer space, you are not accelerating, but there is no gravity.
Space expands together with spreading out matter. Space cannot expand without matter dispersing.
Herzblut is not so far off the mark. If the only stuff in the universe were ordinary matter and radiation, the rate of expansion would indeed be slowing. If might or might not stop the expansion entirely and begin contracting, depending on the initial "velocity" of the big bang (the equations are more or less the same as those that describe an object fired vertically from the surface of the earth - it either reaches a maximum height and then falls back, or it started with more than escape velocity and goes forever).
The observation that the expansion is accelerating indicates that there is some non-standard form of energy around - that's what's called dark energy. It must have the property that it pushes things apart rather than pulling them together. The simplest possibility - and something that was present in general relativity from the very beginning, because it is the unique term one can add that's consistent with general covariance and important at long distances - is a positive cosmological constant.
EDIT - by the way, if dark energy is in fact a positive cosmo. const., the future of our universe is de Sitter space. So it probably does exist even in your strict sense.
Yep.(Aside: insert the mass of the Earth for M and its radius for r. And what pops out? a = 9.81 ms-2.)
Close together means on a galactic scale.What do you mean by "exists"? A mathematical solution of the field equations does not necessarily describe a universe that could ever come into existence. It's first of all a mathematical model.
An absolute space without any objects in it does not make any physical sense to me. You can define a metric such that the geometrical distance between two points can be calculated, but it can never be measured because there is nothing there to measure.
What do you mean by "close" together? The largest scales of structures are billions of light years.
My point is, again, that if matter would be coalescing on largest scales, physical space could not expand.
1. The orbit of every planet is an ellipse with the sun at one of the foci.
2. A line joining a planet and the sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time as the planet travels along its orbit.
3. The squares of the orbital periods of planets are directly proportional to the cubes of the semi-major axes (the "half-length" of the ellipse) of their orbits.
In other words, there are times when the ISS is getting closer to the Earth, and is being accelerated by its gravity. In even simpler words - there are times when the ISS is falling towards the Earth.
Orbits are are particular case of free fall, and they are subject to acceleration due to gravity.
I'm a professional astrophysicist. I've studied orbital mechanics, and work with people who do cutting edge research on the subject. So I can say the following with some authority.
You are wrong. Plain and simple. Wrong.

momentum perpendicular to the pull of gravity.So, an orbit is both a free fall and... what?
momentum perpendicular to the pull of gravity.

An ellipse has 2 centers (an ellipse is a path such that the sum of the distances to two fixed points is a constant). An orbiting body orbits the 2 centers and does not go directly away from either.When the object is moving away from the Earth it is moving perpendicular?
We are talking about an ellipse are we not?
Is there not a point in an ellipse in which the object is moving away from the center?
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An ellipse has 2 centers (an ellipse is a path such that the sum of the distances to two fixed points is a constant). An orbiting body orbits the 2 centers and does not go directly away from either.

An ellipse has 2 centers ( or a center and a directrix).Gravity has two centers?
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An ellipse has 2 centers ( or a center and a directrix).

Still waiting...........Gravity has two centers?