...why is it so much weaker than other forces? Why can I pick up a brick when the entire gravitational force of the Earth is pulling it down?
I'm by no means a physicist, but I've read a little about M-theory (and I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express?). From what I remember, one of the current theories about gravity is that it originates in another membrane - another universe - and leaks into ours. Thats a bit bizarre for me to wrap my head around, but it speaks to the lack of understanding of gravity being discussed here.
Why do objects in space attract one another and why is the same not true here on Earth where we are within a gravity field.
The cloud seeding thing is just a distraction. Nobody who knows about cloud seeding is confused about how it works. The questions are about does it cause more rain or not, not about how it works, or if it does.
It's a silly sidetrack.
Maybe I am misunderstanding something. Is there something that says we are at a limit in understanding the fundamental forces? So that there is nothing to find when we try to look deeper?
That isn't exactly true, and even if you just meant that you, personally, can't do that, wouldn't you agree that someone who can do it has a very solid understanding of digital watches?Yes, but I can say the very same about my digital watch, but be no closer to understanding how it works.
The OP believes that gravity on earth behaves differently from gravity in space, and isn't interested enough to comment on the replies he got. There's no way someone like that could understand a good answer to that question. And the question he should be asking at this point isn't "why", but rather "what does Newton's theory of gravity say, and how do we know that gravity behaves that way?"As for the water/rain analogy I'm not sure it adds anything to the discussion started by the OP: "What Produces gravity? why does it exist? How does it work".
That was a response to the absurd statement that we don't even have a theory of gravity, and the (also incorrect) claim that gravity is not well understood. A person who makes those claims either doesn't know what is known about gravity, or doesn't know what it means to understand something. In this case, the real issue seems to be the latter. Hence the discussion about understanding.Stating that we know more about gravity than anything else necessarily pushes us into a subjective argument about "more" rather than allowing a discussion about the whys and hows of gravity.
But that's not what we're saying. What we're saying is that if you ask "why?", the answer is just another reason to ask "why?" again.To simply state "it works, live with it" intentionally sidesteps the question...
so whats wrong with that? That does bring up an interesting question. Can there be a way of knowing that something is fundamental as opposed to brought about by or composed by something else?but then we just moved the "why?" question on stage back
so whats wrong with that? That does bring up an interesting question. Can there be a way of knowing that something is fundamental as opposed to brought about by or composed by something else?
I have no problem with people saying we don't know it just seems some people are saying to the why question why bother asking if it just leads to more questions. People need to say we don't know that question but here is what we do know and any answer to the question must agree with these observations.
What on Earth is wrong with gravity?
Tuesday 29th January 2008, 9pm, BBC Two
Particle physicist and ex D:Ream keyboard player Dr Brian Cox wants to know why the Universe is built the way it is. He believes the answers lie in the force of gravity. But Newton thought gravity was powered by God, and even Einstein failed to completely solve it. Heading out with his film crew on a road trip across the USA, Brian fires lasers at the moon in Texas, goes mad in the desert in Arizona, encounters the bending of space and time at a maximum security military base, tries to detect ripples in our reality in the swamps of Louisiana and searches for hidden dimensions just outside Chicago.
There's no way to prove that a theory is fundamental in the sense that it's the last step in a series of "why" questions. However, it's not hard to see that every theory that exists today is not fundamental. General relativity includes a classical description of matter, but we already know that matter behaves in a way that can only be described by quantum mechanics. So GR can't be fundamental. The standard model, which describes the other particles and interactions, is a quantum field theory formulated in the framework of special relativity, which basically means that it really just explains how matter would interact in a fictional universe where Einstein's equation doesn't hold. So the standard model can't be fundamental either.so whats wrong with that? That does bring up an interesting question. Can there be a way of knowing that something is fundamental as opposed to brought about by or composed by something else?
Who do you think is weaseling? I have answered the question as thoroughly as it can be answered without resorting to highly speculative ideas that aren't developed enough to be called "theories" yet.This weaseling about over "why" is damn funny. Why? Because if there is one thing scientist like to know, and always ask, it is "why?". The other is "how?".
People are spending tons of money on this thing you say is very limited if any value. Asking why and how and finding out ways of testing there answers.That is not really the case. But holding up a lack of understanding why something is the way it is as a problem with the understanding of how it functions is of very limited if any value.
interesting but wouldn't some part still have to hold even if a theory changes? Like can a new theory get rid of uncertainty or does that have to stay? thanks for explaining that I find that much more informativeThere's no way to prove that a theory is fundamental in the sense that it's the last step in a series of "why" questions. However, it's not hard to see that every theory that exists today is not fundamental. General relativity includes a classical description of matter, but we already know that matter behaves in a way that can only be described by quantum mechanics. So GR can't be fundamental. The standard model, which describes the other particles and interactions, is a quantum field theory formulated in the framework of special relativity, which basically means that it really just explains how matter would interact in a fictional universe where Einstein's equation doesn't hold. So the standard model can't be fundamental either.
I understand how all the others are calculated but this one is beyond what I know about orbits. Why does it deviate from being perfectly elliptical?
...and some extra text so I can post this.Why does Gravity work?
Gravity works because everything is made up of matter/energy andall matter/energy is not the samematter/energy shapes the geometry of space-time and is also influenced by it in the way that's described by Einstein's equation.
Ok let me see if I can explain somethings.
Why does Gravity work?
Gravity works because everything is made up of matter/energy and all matter/energy is not the same.
Gravity works because everything is made up of matter/energy and matter/energy shapes the geometry of space-time and is also influenced by it in the way that's described by Einstein's equation.
For this "explanation" to demonstrate understanding, however, presupposes a prior understanding and comprehension of the "geometry of space-time" and "Einstein's equation". Now, who here can demonstrate such understanding, as opposed to simply "explaining" them, that is?
For this "explanation" to demonstrate understanding, however, presupposes a prior understanding and comprehension of the "geometry of space-time" and "Einstein's equation". Now, who here can demonstrate such understanding, as opposed to simply "explaining" them, that is?