Pushing Gravity

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17 years 11 months ago #15311 by rousejohnny
OOOPS, wrong forum....sorry.

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17 years 11 months ago #15961 by tvanflandern
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by rousejohnny</i>
<br />I was wondering if pushing gravity could be a hydrodynamic effect where mass displaces x (the pusher) and x is trying to fill in the void?<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">That seems to replace a single force (gravitons pushing on mass) with two new unexplained forces. What causes the hydrodynamic force that pushes x? What force enables x to push back? And why wouldn't these two forces cancel, leaving everything as it was?

Remember, in a vacuum, fluids do not stay together but simply dissipate. If a hole appears in a fluid, there is no tendency to fill it in unless something like gravity is already present. So, like the much-heralded rubber sheet analogy, this hydrodynamic idea seems to require pre-existing gravity to enable it to be an explanation for gravity. -|Tom|-

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17 years 11 months ago #15835 by rousejohnny
Replied by rousejohnny on topic Reply from Johnny Rouse
I understand, I was extremely unclear (as usual). The x would be some form of some sort of elysium that is infinate, but in a fixed volume. The mass displaces the elysium which then attempts to fill in the void generated by the mass.

The problem is why the well never fills? Now, here is a truely wild speculation..... Mass absorbs it and this is where the particles get there mass....this is the "higgs".

There is a GUT.

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