Michael Mozina
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2009
- Messages
- 9,361
That would depend on how they interacted with the vacuum. But yes, the Casimir effect (an example of negative pressure in a vacuum) can pull objects together from inside. Michael likes to pretend that it's really a push from outside, but that explanation actually fails rather dramatically under serious scrutiny.
It really doesn't make a darn bit of difference if they are "pushed" together or "pull' each other due to atomic attraction. You don't have another PLATE to work with in a vacuum, just your *SINGLE* clump of 'stuff' and the vacuum itself. If you had *ANOTHER* clump of separate stuff, *THEN* and only then would your analogy have any merit. Since you don't have two things to even work with in the first place, your two plate analogy is MEANINGLESS to Guth's claim.