I've wanted to make this thread for a little while, simply because when I first learned this fact, I didn't believe it.
Truth is, the concept of 'gravity' you learn about in school not totally correct. In school, you learn that the mass of a celestial object (like Earth) imparts an attraction force on other, smaller celestial objects. This 'pull' of gravity accounts for how we are standing in place rather than floating off into space, the Earth is so big it hooks us to its surface. This concept is simply not true, its a rushed and simplified way to explain gravity.
Truth is, gravity is not accounted for by object mass, but rather space being displaced by the volume of an object. The quickest and most easy way to describe the relationship between Earth and space is to liken it to a ball in a bathtub. When you submerge a ball underwater, it displaces the water and makes the height of the water in the bathtub rise. Celestial objects like Earth do the same to Space.
This is because space is not simply 'nothing'. Rather, space is comparable to a 3-dimensional fabric. This fabric can be bent, folded, scrunched up and displaced. So for a celestial object to exist in the universe, it must displace its volume worth of space in order to exist. As a result, the space in its direct proximity is scrunched up and folded along the surface, thus causing a force being imparted at its surface.
So don't confuse gravity as a the mass of an object pulling you down. Rather, the great volume of the earth causes a great deal of space to wrinkle at the surface of our atmosphere. This wrinkle in space, since space has an essence and is not nothing, imparts a force down on the Earth thus creating the illusion of gravity. The larger the celestial object, the more space it deforms and thus the more 'gravity' it creates.
The only difference in the bathtub example is if you were to plop a new planet in the universe, it would not raise the overall volume of the universe like submerging a ball in a bathtub will. Rather, in the universe, the distortion of space around an object only occurs in the immediate vicinity, it does not have an effect on all of space. That is why there is a lot of gravity near the surface of a planet, but not out in the middle of space.
I know this is an odd concept and some might simply not believe me, but this is the true facts about gravity and space. The concept you learned in school is most likely an incomplete or false version of reality. Thank you for reading and if this concept intrigues you, please do not fail to comment on it!
Truth is, the concept of 'gravity' you learn about in school not totally correct. In school, you learn that the mass of a celestial object (like Earth) imparts an attraction force on other, smaller celestial objects. This 'pull' of gravity accounts for how we are standing in place rather than floating off into space, the Earth is so big it hooks us to its surface. This concept is simply not true, its a rushed and simplified way to explain gravity.
Truth is, gravity is not accounted for by object mass, but rather space being displaced by the volume of an object. The quickest and most easy way to describe the relationship between Earth and space is to liken it to a ball in a bathtub. When you submerge a ball underwater, it displaces the water and makes the height of the water in the bathtub rise. Celestial objects like Earth do the same to Space.
This is because space is not simply 'nothing'. Rather, space is comparable to a 3-dimensional fabric. This fabric can be bent, folded, scrunched up and displaced. So for a celestial object to exist in the universe, it must displace its volume worth of space in order to exist. As a result, the space in its direct proximity is scrunched up and folded along the surface, thus causing a force being imparted at its surface.
So don't confuse gravity as a the mass of an object pulling you down. Rather, the great volume of the earth causes a great deal of space to wrinkle at the surface of our atmosphere. This wrinkle in space, since space has an essence and is not nothing, imparts a force down on the Earth thus creating the illusion of gravity. The larger the celestial object, the more space it deforms and thus the more 'gravity' it creates.
The only difference in the bathtub example is if you were to plop a new planet in the universe, it would not raise the overall volume of the universe like submerging a ball in a bathtub will. Rather, in the universe, the distortion of space around an object only occurs in the immediate vicinity, it does not have an effect on all of space. That is why there is a lot of gravity near the surface of a planet, but not out in the middle of space.
I know this is an odd concept and some might simply not believe me, but this is the true facts about gravity and space. The concept you learned in school is most likely an incomplete or false version of reality. Thank you for reading and if this concept intrigues you, please do not fail to comment on it!