All that image shows is that you're too stupid to understand the earth and moon are different sizes, and water vs air have different physical properties.
[ - ] McNasty 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 13:01:57 ago (+2/-1)
Lol.
You have to explain why the moon can beat the Earth's gravity at the surface but in the same location lose at the edge of the atmosphere. The Earth should be weaker at that point and the moon should be stronger and it would have the addition of the near perfect vacuum that it exists in.
Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, proposed in 1915, explains gravity as the curvature of spacetime caused by the uneven distribution of mass and energy
It's just a bunch of jewish theoretical metaphys. That's why Tesla said this.
Einstein's relativity work is a magnificent mathematical garb which fascinates, dazzles and makes people blind to the underlying errors. The theory is like a beggar clothed in purple whom ignorant people take for a king... its exponents are brilliant men but they are metaphysicists rather than scientists. -Nikola Tesla-
This isn't hard. I don't know why I'm going to bother telling you this because you'll just ignore it. The vacuum of space doesn't exert any suction force on the atmosphere. People think it works like a vacuum cleaner, but it doesn't. Vacuum cleaners operate on Bernoulli's principle. This relies on there being high positive air pressure at earth's surface (from the weight of the atmosphere). A fan in the vacuum moves air, which lowers its pressure, higher pressure air displaces it, creating a current. The faster the fan blows, the higher the suction. This isn't how the vacuum of outer space works.
At the outer limits of earth's atmosphere, there is barely any air pressure. The molecules that remain there do so because of earth's gravity. This doesn't have to be a large force of gravity at all. Molecules are very small. It only takes a nudge to make them favor the path toward earth. Remember, gravity turns spacetime into a big bowl around the earth. The molecules don't have much velocity unless they get excited by something higher energy, so they stay in the bowl. This is one of the dangers of solar wind (which makes our magnetosphere so important). It doesn't take too much energy to strip the outer atmosphere, so without earth's magnetism, it would get blown away.
As for the moon being able to promote tides, it isn't the only thing that does this. The sun does too, as well as the motion of the earth. Imagine that the earth was stationary and existed all on its own. At equilibrium, the oceans would not move. But it's very easy to throw the gravitational field out of equilibrium, even with a small gravitational force. Just start a satellite spinning around the earth. The force could be minimal, but it will still effect a fluid like the ocean (it would just take better instrumentation to detect the smaller the moon's gravity becomes). Why? Water is essentially incompressible, meaning the gravity of earth is doing about everything it can. But the water has extremely low viscosity, meaning it can move over itself in sheets and form different temperature and salinity gradients. The water wants to move perpendicular to the direction of compression, so if you throw in a moon and spin it around the earth, it doesn't take much to make the oceans move in and out - which is movement that is perpendicular to the direction of compression/gravity.
[ - ] McNasty 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:20:52 ago (+1/-0)
Lol. It's a rhetorical question. If I told you to prove Santa Claus is real, I'm not going to accept your evidence that there are bites out of the cookie and sips out of the glass of milk.
Santa Claus isn't real faggot. The Earth is objectively flat and stationary.
In what way does the moon's gravity beat the earth's? The moon's position, its entire orbit, is determined by the earth. It doesn't beat shit, but all else equal, if you spin a big enough object around the earth, it can exert a force on fluids with low viscosity, that tend to want to move perpendicular to the force of gravity as it is. You have almost no intuition or natural ability in physics.
High and low tides are caused by the moon. The moon's gravitational pull generates something called the tidal force. The tidal force causes Earth—and its water—to bulge out on the side closest to the moon and the side farthest from the moon. These bulges of water are high tides.
If the Moon's gravity pull is generating a tidal force, it is competing with the Earth gravity. To create that Force, it needs to overcome the Earth's gravity.
So the official claim for heliocentrism is that the moon's gravity is what causes the ocean's tides at the surface.
This same gravity is competing with the Earth's gravity at the edge of the atmosphere for the same matter under the same conditions except it has the addition of the near perfect vacuum of space.
So this isn't even just about the moon versus the Earth. The near perfect vacuum of space is always a factor in this equation which you cannot account for.
You have bad intuitions, and you're completely unwilling to learn. You just go around shouting like a retard having a fit, and you refuse to read. The answers to your 'challenges' were already given, but you won't read them. Your stupidity is your own fault.
The moon is not competing with the earth's gravity in the way you think. Imagine a cable with tension on it. That's force along the axis of the cable. If somebody walked right up to the cable and pulled on the center in a perpendicular direction to the long axis, he could pull the cable out of straight in either direction.
That's what the moon does to the oceans. For every 'region' of water in the ocean, the direction of force is toward the center of the earth. As the moon moves around the earth, it exerts forces at angles to that. Water has extremely low viscosity. Under compression (like it is under gravity) it wants to move the other way, in all directions away from the line of force.
So, the moon tugs on the oceans in a direction that earth's gravity is not tugging it. It has physical properties that make it want to move in the way the moon tugs on it, hence tides, because the moon is always at a different position relative to earth.
Alright. I'm done talking with you. In the course of a week, I've given you good answers for all of the dogshit you've spread around this site. You just revert to a previous 'save state' and keep spamming the same things over and over again.
[ + ] FreeinTX
[ - ] FreeinTX 5 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 11:35:09 ago (+5/-0)
Yup. Jew.
[ + ] JewsAintHonkies
[ - ] JewsAintHonkies 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 15:25:14 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] FreeinTX
[ - ] FreeinTX 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 15:32:24 ago (+0/-0)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabbalah
Don't apologize for them, attack them for it.
[ + ] OoklaTheMok
[ - ] OoklaTheMok 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:54:15 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] jsac
[ - ] jsac 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 15:07:16 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] big_fat_dangus
[ - ] big_fat_dangus [op] 3 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 15:14:28 ago (+3/-0)
[ + ] jsac
[ - ] jsac 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 20:14:19 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] big_fat_dangus
[ - ] big_fat_dangus [op] 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 20:15:14 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] jsac
[ - ] jsac 0 points 9 monthsAug 3, 2024 04:27:19 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 11:37:14 ago (+2/-2)
It that's simply. Stop avoiding this contradiction.
https://files.catbox.moe/lkcyvy.png
[ + ] big_fat_dangus
[ - ] big_fat_dangus [op] 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 13:00:19 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 13:01:57 ago (+2/-1)
You have to explain why the moon can beat the Earth's gravity at the surface but in the same location lose at the edge of the atmosphere. The Earth should be weaker at that point and the moon should be stronger and it would have the addition of the near perfect vacuum that it exists in.
It's retarded.
[ + ] DitchPig
[ - ] DitchPig 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 13:18:53 ago (+2/-1)
[ + ] Her0n
[ - ] Her0n 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 14:03:14 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 13:21:38 ago (+1/-1)
When you Google what gravity is.
It's just a bunch of jewish theoretical metaphys. That's why Tesla said this.
[ + ] big_fat_dangus
[ - ] big_fat_dangus [op] 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 15:15:06 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] CHIRO
[ - ] CHIRO 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:17:04 ago (+0/-0)*
At the outer limits of earth's atmosphere, there is barely any air pressure. The molecules that remain there do so because of earth's gravity. This doesn't have to be a large force of gravity at all. Molecules are very small. It only takes a nudge to make them favor the path toward earth. Remember, gravity turns spacetime into a big bowl around the earth. The molecules don't have much velocity unless they get excited by something higher energy, so they stay in the bowl. This is one of the dangers of solar wind (which makes our magnetosphere so important). It doesn't take too much energy to strip the outer atmosphere, so without earth's magnetism, it would get blown away.
As for the moon being able to promote tides, it isn't the only thing that does this. The sun does too, as well as the motion of the earth. Imagine that the earth was stationary and existed all on its own. At equilibrium, the oceans would not move. But it's very easy to throw the gravitational field out of equilibrium, even with a small gravitational force. Just start a satellite spinning around the earth. The force could be minimal, but it will still effect a fluid like the ocean (it would just take better instrumentation to detect the smaller the moon's gravity becomes). Why? Water is essentially incompressible, meaning the gravity of earth is doing about everything it can. But the water has extremely low viscosity, meaning it can move over itself in sheets and form different temperature and salinity gradients. The water wants to move perpendicular to the direction of compression, so if you throw in a moon and spin it around the earth, it doesn't take much to make the oceans move in and out - which is movement that is perpendicular to the direction of compression/gravity.
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:20:52 ago (+1/-0)
Santa Claus isn't real faggot. The Earth is objectively flat and stationary.
[ + ] CHIRO
[ - ] CHIRO 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:21:52 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:24:31 ago (+1/-0)
I'm telling you that Heliocentrism is jewish nonsense. You're showing me evidence akin to cookies and milk proving Santa Claus.
[ + ] CHIRO
[ - ] CHIRO 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:28:12 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 1 point 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:33:23 ago (+1/-0)
https://scijinks.gov/tides/
If the Moon's gravity pull is generating a tidal force, it is competing with the Earth gravity. To create that Force, it needs to overcome the Earth's gravity.
So the official claim for heliocentrism is that the moon's gravity is what causes the ocean's tides at the surface.
This same gravity is competing with the Earth's gravity at the edge of the atmosphere for the same matter under the same conditions except it has the addition of the near perfect vacuum of space.
So this isn't even just about the moon versus the Earth. The near perfect vacuum of space is always a factor in this equation which you cannot account for.
[ + ] CHIRO
[ - ] CHIRO 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:52:20 ago (+0/-0)
The moon is not competing with the earth's gravity in the way you think. Imagine a cable with tension on it. That's force along the axis of the cable. If somebody walked right up to the cable and pulled on the center in a perpendicular direction to the long axis, he could pull the cable out of straight in either direction.
That's what the moon does to the oceans. For every 'region' of water in the ocean, the direction of force is toward the center of the earth. As the moon moves around the earth, it exerts forces at angles to that. Water has extremely low viscosity. Under compression (like it is under gravity) it wants to move the other way, in all directions away from the line of force.
So, the moon tugs on the oceans in a direction that earth's gravity is not tugging it. It has physical properties that make it want to move in the way the moon tugs on it, hence tides, because the moon is always at a different position relative to earth.
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 17:59:50 ago (+0/-0)
You're a retarded jew. Sucking jewish NASA cock is not leaning anything you faggot. Lol.
[ + ] CHIRO
[ - ] CHIRO 0 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 18:04:34 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] McNasty
[ - ] McNasty -1 points 9 monthsAug 2, 2024 11:38:21 ago (+1/-2)