Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Given the prevalent meme of 'Scientists have X years left to make hoverboards', it fills me with glee that this video exists - with Christopher Lloyd, no less. It's like what they did when the Terminator movies' 'far and distant future' became the present day - and they created fabricated tie-in media.
How does one show that the earth goes around the sun using physicist and mathematics?
How does one show that the earth goes around the sun using physicist and mathematics?
More directly, classical gravitation requires that the Earth go around the Sun.By showing that predictions made on the basis of that hypothesis correspond to what can be observed in fact. The relevant scientific theory is Newton's Theory of Gravitation.
More directly, classical gravitation requires that the Earth go around the Sun.
More directly, classical gravitation requires that the Earth go around the Sun.
No it doesn't.
Well, the idea of an observation centre is valid, but it's unrelated to geocentrism (or rather, it's an issue geocentrists get muddled up). The observable universe is how much of the universe we can observe, limited as we are by the speed of light (anything so far away that its light hasn't reached us yet, is outside the observable universe). Every point is the 'centre' of the 'universe' in that sense, but this is more a mechanical conceit - if I stand on a hill, I am the centre of the circle of land that I can observe. If you stand on a hill, you are the centre of yours.I've heard astronomers say that the tip of my nose is as good as any other point to be the center of the universe. If all galaxies, all points in space, are receding from every other point, then geocentrism is as true as any other -centrism.
Not every consequence of a theory is known to its developers. I don't doubt that parsimony was one of the reasons people dropped geocentrism, but that doesn't mean it's the only one. Classical gravitation requires the Earth to accelerate around the barycentre of the Earth/Sun system. That Newton was unaware of this is irrelevant.No it doesn't. In principle gravitation could just as easily have the sun orbiting the Earth. The thing which settled the argument in favour of heliocentrism was that, with Newton's theory, it needed far less special pleading to explain the observable motion of the planets (relative to the Earth).
Prior to that, geocentrism still had supporters, including that of Newton's own university.
Wow this is thread 8 of this subject... how did I miss so many of the other ones? Last I knew it was on 4 then... BAM 8... I need to pay closer attention.
(One could argue that, however inelegant, we could still pick a non-inertial frame and be done with it. The problem is this is demonstrably silly: it'd be like going on a merry-go-round and exclaiming that the entire universe is orbiting you, when quite obviously it's just you who's moving).
Obvious to who?![]()
A non-rotating Earth is easy to disprove. The classic disproof is Foucault's pendulum, which was the final nail in the coffin of mainstream geocentrism.
Generally if I don't know the answer to something I tend to not reply - "I don't know" isn't a very interesting response*Cough* Not to be more repetitive than I usually am, but if I could get some help with this problem I'd appreciate it(or let it die a horrible, horrible death) :
Not to my knowledge... but I feel there's an obvious answer that I'm not seeing. Black holes? Negative temperature/pressure? Maybe integrals across contours or manifolds in EM? Hmm...http://www.christianforums.com/t7648346-71/#post65156823
I'll link the notion of what I'm speaking:
Pole (complex analysis) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Again:
Integration over (a,b) in R, which is not an infinite interval, with simple poles on (a,b) and no singularities on {a,b}. Does that occur in physics as far as anyone here knows?
I'm thinking about creating a separate thread for this but, I'll ask here first anyway:
Are there any practical (i.e. possibly within physics) applications of integration over a finite distance on the real line, where the function in question has simple poles (which can be represented as f(x) = g(x) * 1/(x-x_j), where x_j is a pole within that interval, not lying on the endpoints) within that interval?