No, the universe is expanding. And I am not the slightest bit attracted to you way over there in California.Like the energizer bunny, Gravity keeps going and going.
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No, the universe is expanding. And I am not the slightest bit attracted to you way over there in California.Like the energizer bunny, Gravity keeps going and going.
And I am not the slightest bit attracted to you way over there in California.
I think this thread has gotten silly.I think you're protesting too much. Besides, I know better.
I think this thread has gotten silly.
Excuse me, but please refer to the thread title - Weighing Long Things, not Determining The Mass Of Long Things.The issue is that you are not in the slightest bit interested in how much the board weighs, you care about it's mass, and that is a constant not affected by gravity (assuming no velocity differences).
Excuse me, but please refer to the thread title - Weighing Long Things, not Determining The Mass Of Long Things.
So if it extended outside Earth's atmosphere, only the section of the wood subject to Earth's gravity would be weighed accurately?
The atmosphere is not a magic barrier, but distance from a large mass like the Earth is. I wonder how a scale would measure a hypothetical beam which extended outside the atmosphere. Some of it would be normal, some of it lighter, and at the ends it would be weightless.
Stand the 4x2 on end and let go for a moment as you take the reading. It will take a few seconds before it starts to tip.
I have also weighed long objects by weighing each end.
If you put one end of the wood on a brick, and the other end on the scales, each end will bear 50% of the load, so just double it. You can check by swapping the scaled from one end to the other.
Its the same as using 2 or even 3 sets of scales on a large object. Add the scale weights together to get the total.
But he wants the weight... not the mass.All the mass of an object acts as if it resided entirely at its center of mass. If it is of uniform density the center of mass will be at the geometrical center. So if the 2X4 is balanced on the scale there is no problem. For very long objects two scales could be used.
But he wants the weight... not the mass.
Some portions of the flat object will be further away from the Earth than others and so record a lighter weight than they would at the scale. Of course, this is negligible over 20ft.
Exactly. And portions of a long flat object would be further away from the Earths gravity than at the scale. I guess that difference is effectively part of "the weight" of the object tho.Weight is a measure of the force of gravity on a mass. My mass would be the same on Earth and Mars but my weight would be different on each.
Which suggests to me that the weight would be greater when weighed lying horizontally on the scale than when standing vertically on the scale. In each case, the point resting on the scale is deepest in the gravity well, but when standing vertically, more of it is further away from that point than when it's lying horizontallyExactly. And portions of a long flat object would be further away from the Earths gravity than at the scale. I guess that difference is effectively part of "the weight" of the object tho.