Michael Mozina
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2009
- Messages
- 9,361
No, it doesn't! How many times do you need this explained to you?
You are *outrageous* in the statements you make. Let's see you jump off Earth, and accelerate away without *energy*.
Two objects will accelerate towards each other under the influence of gravity because their gravitational potential energy becomes more and more negative as they approach each other.
No. Two objects at some distance from each other have a positive *potential energy* that can be converted into *kinetic energy*. On the other hand, in my two bomb analogy, if there is *zero* distance between the two bombs, then there is no potential energy between them as a result of gravity. Distance can be equated with *potential energy*, but even without potential energy between them, there is potential energy inside each bomb that can be converted to kinetic energy again. Gravity won't cancel out the energy from the bombs. There is no point where a zero energy state exists in the bomb analogy. There is a constant *positive energy density* between them. Even space between the bombs as an experimental given only *adds* to the total energy of the system.
Acceleration requires a change in energy - it depends on the gradient of the potential.
The potential energy is positive in any distance between those two bombs. That positive potential energy will be converted to positive kinetic energy by the time they hit one another. Assuming the distance is small, it may not have much total effect. If the distance is great enough, perhaps it could liberate the energy inside each of the bombs! There is no "negative energy". There is *Potential energy* and *kinetic energy*, but gravity is not a "negative energy" that "cancels out" all the energy of the rest of the system.
You've ignored all the physical explanations given to you.
Your "explanations" were wrong. No "negative" energy is turned into kinetic energy. All we have is *potential energy* being turned into *kinetic energy* and that's it. You're so lost in your math that you can't see the forest for the trees!
You've ignored all the math we've shown you.
That is because you math is inapplicable to describing the *total system energy* and it is completely dependent upon an arbitrary frame of reference! You keep ignoring the key issue!
Just admit you were wrong and learn something.
I'll be happy to do that as soon as you demonstrate your claim. Show me how you achieve a "bang" from a "zero net energy" experiment. Show me how you achieve acceleration in "zero net energy" experiment.
I gave you one example of a *non accelerating* "bang", but even that requires *net positive energy*.
You folks are so fixated a mathematical equation that you forget to do your lab work to verify any of your claims. You will *not* achieve a "bang" from a "zero net energy" experiment in a lab.

