Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
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Have we had the pictures with the arrows yet?
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Have we had the pictures with the arrows yet?
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Now you're back into semantics again.It is still going on because Michael Mozina cannot understand the concept that forces other than those caused by particles bumping against surfaces exert pressure.
We have given him the example of the Casimir effect which in theory and experiment gives negative pressure.
We have given him the example of the cosmological constant in general relativity causing a negative pressure.
He is now trying to ignore the next example (the force between 2 oppositely charged plates causes a negative pressure).
All defintions of pressure allow negative pressure to exist.
Now you're back into semantics again.
2 opposite poled magnets would then exert a "negative pressure" if held apart, if your only definition of pressure is "surface area dependent force"
Hell, even frictional forces could be considered negative pressures under that definition...
You say that like pressure and force are unrelated. But they aren't. Pressure = Force/area, or force = pressure x area. The force between the plates scales as the area of the plates. That's a pressure, Michael.
Why can't you treat the vacuum as a mathematical object?
As long as you treat it as a "positive" kinetic energy/pressure state, or even a ZERO kinetic energy/pressure state, you're welcome to do so.
And if the universal conditions had sufficient force to remover the ideal piston from the ideal sealed chamber?![]()
My defintion is not "surface area dependent force" whatever you think that is.Now you're back into semantics again.
2 opposite poled magnets would then exert a "negative pressure" if held apart, if your only definition of pressure is "surface area dependent force"
Hell, even frictional forces could be considered negative pressures under that definition...
That definition means that a force toward a surface has positive pressure and a force away from a surface has a negative pressure.The pressure is the scalar proportionality constant that relates the two normal vectors:
![]()
The minus sign comes from the fact that the force is considered towards the surface element, while the normal vector points outwards
You did read Skwinty's post and notice the smilie?You mean to claim that you have a *EXTERNAL PISTON* and a sealed chamber to work with?
Sure, and if Guth
For a negative pressure all you need is an energy that remains constant as volume increases.
Not a problem, but the actual force is due to something else. Call it a pressure if you want. It's a matter of convention--semanticsOnly if the plates were magnetized perpendicular to the plate. Otherwise the force won't scale with area. But I don't see what's wrong with this as an example of a pressure, and you haven't said why it's a problem.
Ho-ho--I was thinking mode along the lines of go stick your foot in a swamp. Wait a few minutes, then try to pull it out. The friction generated by the fluid, trying to hang on to your foot (oops-lost a shoe!) would be negative pressure.Not if you only look at the force normal to the surface. Which is pretty normal to do (pun intended).
To (likely) 99.9% of folk it's still a theoretical masturbation exercise. Most of us don't work to those lveles of precison. Top the rest of us you measure absolute gas pressure which CANNOT be less than zero at these levels of measurement. Hence my comments about definitions. Guage pressure is a different kettle of fish, obviously you can have a negative pressure differential (yet another definition...)"by definition". What's the definition? Because according to standard definitions of pressure, it can indeed be negative. What definition of pressure precludes negative values? I've never seen such a definition.
There is a very standard definition which works for both classical mechanics and quantum mechanics. So I'm not sure why you think the answer "depends on your definition", when a very standard definition is available for both classical and quantum mechanics.
I have yet to see a case where the definition P = -dE/dV does not work.
Not a problem, but the actual force is due to something else. Call it a pressure if you want. It's a matter of convention--semantics
Ho-ho--I was thinking mode along the lines of go stick your foot in a swamp. Wait a few minutes, then try to pull it out. The friction generated by the fluid, trying to hang on to your foot (oops-lost a shoe!) would be negative pressure.
To (likely) 99.9% of folk it's still a theoretical masturbation exercise.
Most of us don't work to those lveles of precison. Top the rest of us you measure absolute gas pressure which CANNOT be less than zero at these levels of measurement.
Given that, I will retire from this conversation (for the reasons given above).
If you want to talk about Casimair effects, raise a thread about that, rather than raising a thread about negative pressure, when 'you' are actually trying to talk about something completely different!
Once again, I'm not talking about Guth. Forget Guth. Let's talk about the scenario YOU proposed. This isn't an analogy, it's a physical scenario in its own right.