[meteorite-list] (no subject)
From: Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_webb_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 26 Aug 2009 13:13:50 -0500 Message-ID: <50D4A4E8156347A4B30C91E59DCD3FE7_at_ATARIENGINE2> Hi, Dan, Rob, List, The key weasel-word in that puzzle is "infinite." An infinite number of anything, no matter how small, even neutrons, has infinite mass and hence exerts infinite gravitational force. Your infinite stack of Earths will collapsr at the speed of light, having wrapped all space and time around itself. You are a string of particles stretched out over light years, with the tip of your nose pressed against the event horizon at the speed of light where you feel infinite force, but you are not moving because time is standing still for you, and you will stay that way forever... in your inertial frame. The Newtonian solution is simple. Using the central force assumption of Newtonian gravitation (hey! works for me!), the gravity you feel is the sum of an infinite series: 1 + (1/3)^2 + (1/5)^2 + (1/7)^2 + (1/9)^2 + (1/11)^2 + (1/13)^2 + (1/15)^2 + (1/17)^2 + (1/19)^2 + ... = 1.208722 G's! (approximately, OK?) Your problem is that your Earths are too close together. There is a cosmological solution that allows an infinite static universe with infinite mass to have a finite and low mass density. They're called Charlier universes, but I never met one. They're awfully empty... Experiment is the key to all knowledge. You stack up an infinite number of Earths, then time falling objects with a pendulum, or even better, time the pendulum... right in the heart of downtown Gedankenland. Sterling K. Webb ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dan Brumleve" jdb1729 at gmail.com To: mojave_meteorites at cox.net cc: "meteorite-list" meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com Sent: Wednesday, August 26, 2009 2:57 AM Subject: [meteorite-list] (no subject) > Reminds me of a thought-experiment that I thought of... > > If there are an infinite number of Earths stacked on top of each > other, how much gravity do you feel standing on top? > > Dan > ______________________________________________ Received on Wed 26 Aug 2009 02:13:50 PM PDT |
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