Aether Displacement

Watching insane people argue with each other has a limited entertainment value.

30 pages of the same posts over and over again.
 
Originally Posted by origin
In a pressurized tank of water there will be a certain pressure on the walls and anything in the tank: lets use a beach ball suspended in the tank center for an example. If the water pressure is 100 lbs/in^2 and the beach ball is 1 foot in diameter (904 cubic inches of water displaced) the pressure on the ball will be 100 lbs/in^2. If the beach ball is 10 feet in diameter (905,000 cubic inches of water displaced) the pressure will still be 100 lbs/in^2.

Both balls in your example displace the same amount of water.
You're kidding, right?

Please define "displace".
 
You're kidding, right?

Please define "displace".

That answer of mine wasn't very good.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_effect#Vacuum_energy

"a "field" in physics may be envisioned as if space were filled with interconnected vibrating balls and springs, and the strength of the field can be visualized as the displacement of a ball from its rest position"

A 'field' in physics is space filled with aether and the strength of the field is the displacement of the aether from its rest position.
 
Still crazy after all these years...

Still ignorant of understanding what occurs physically in nature to cause gravity, the observed behaviors in a double slit experiment, the light lensing through the space neighboring moving galaxy clusters and the galaxy clusters themselves, the Milky Way halo being in the shape of a squished beach ball after all these years...
 
Originally Posted by mpc755

Originally Posted by origin
In a pressurized tank of water there will be a certain pressure on the walls and anything in the tank: lets use a beach ball suspended in the tank center for an example. If the water pressure is 100 lbs/in^2 and the beach ball is 1 foot in diameter (904 cubic inches of water displaced) the pressure on the ball will be 100 lbs/in^2. If the beach ball is 10 feet in diameter (905,000 cubic inches of water displaced) the pressure will still be 100 lbs/in^2.

Both balls in your example displace the same amount of water.
Randwolf said:
You're kidding, right?

Please define "displace".

mpc755 said:
That answer of mine wasn't very good.
Really?

So you admit that the properties of your ether (or aether, whichever) do not mimic the properties of a fluid, super or not, on shell or offshell, not even if you drag some properties of a solid in?

More specifically, you agree that two balls in the water tank gedanken that origin set out do not displace the same amount of water, right?
 
Really?

So you admit that the properties of your ether (or aether, whichever) do not mimic the properties of a fluid, super or not, on shell or offshell, not even if you drag some properties of a solid in?

More specifically, you agree that two balls in the water tank gedanken that origin set out do not displace the same amount of water, right?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_effect#Vacuum_energy

"a "field" in physics may be envisioned as if space were filled with interconnected vibrating balls and springs, and the strength of the field can be visualized as the displacement of a ball from its rest position"

More specifically, a 'field' in physics is space filled with aether and the strength of the field is the displacement of the aether from its rest position.

Two balls together displace the aether more from its rest position than each individual ball does when they are separated, thus increasing the strength of the displacement.
 
So you could just as easily push a 3" beach ball filled with air, underwater, as you could push a 3 foot beach ball filled with air underwater?

Has your cheese slid off your cracker?

Of course not, to both questions. The 2 situations are different. However, the whether it is a 3" beach ball or a 3' beach ball they would both experience the SAME LBS/IN^2 or PSI. The reason there would be such a difference is that the 3' beach ball has a butt load more sq. inches.
 
The more mass of the matter there is within a volume the less aether there is in the volume the more aether there is exerting force toward the matter.

Yes and I asked:

What is the equation that relates the displacement of aether by matter to the gravity? Again, feel free to make any assumptions or approximations, just identify what they are.
 
Originally Posted by Randwolf
Really?

So you admit that the properties of your ether (or aether, whichever) do not mimic the properties of a fluid, super or not, on shell or offshell, not even if you drag some properties of a solid in?

More specifically, you agree that two balls in the water tank gedanken that origin set out do not displace the same amount of water, right?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_effect#Vacuum_energy

"a "field" in physics may be envisioned as if space were filled with interconnected vibrating balls and springs, and the strength of the field can be visualized as the displacement of a ball from its rest position"

More specifically, a 'field' in physics is space filled with aether and the strength of the field is the displacement of the aether from its rest position.

Two balls together displace the aether more from its rest position than each individual ball does when they are separated, thus increasing the strength of the displacement. .
Errr… That’s a new one – I think. Have you stated this cumulative affect before? How far apart do two bodies have to be before they can be considered to be "seperate" in the sense you use the word? Also, could you please quantify by how much this is "increasing the strength of the displacement"?

In any event, is it not true that you agree that two balls in the water tank gedanken that origin set out do not displace the same amount of water?
 
Errr… That’s a new one – I think. Have you stated this cumulative affect before? How far apart do two bodies have to be before they can be considered to be "seperate" in the sense you use the word? Also, could you please quantify by how much this is "increasing the strength of the displacement"?

That's the whole point of aether displacement. The greater the displacement of the aether from its rest position the greater the force exerted by the displaced aether toward the matter.

That's what gravity is. It's quantified in the theory of general relativity.

What I have done is figured out the cause of the condition of the state of the aether of relativity as determined by its connections with the matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places.

'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein'
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html

"the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, ... disregarding the causes which condition its state."

The state of the aether at every place determined by its connections with the matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the state of displacement of the aether.
 
That's the whole point of aether displacement. The greater the displacement of the aether from its rest position the greater the force exerted by the displaced aether toward the matter.

That's what gravity is. It's quantified in the theory of general relativity.

What I have done is figured out the cause of the condition of the state of the aether of relativity as determined by its connections with the matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places.

'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein'
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html

"the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, ... disregarding the causes which condition its state."

The state of the aether at every place determined by its connections with the matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the state of displacement of the aether.
Yeah. I’ve seen that bit before.


Back at you…
origin said:
In a pressurized tank of water there will be a certain pressure on the walls and anything in the tank: lets use a beach ball suspended in the tank center for an example. If the water pressure is 100 lbs/in^2 and the beach ball is 1 foot in diameter (904 cubic inches of water displaced) the pressure on the ball will be 100 lbs/in^2. If the beach ball is 10 feet in diameter (905,000 cubic inches of water displaced) the pressure will still be 100 lbs/in^2.
(By the way, I can’t help it if you don’t understand the following question.)

mpc755, is it not true that you agree that two balls in the water tank gedanken that origin set out do not displace the same amount of water?
 
Again with the useless analogies!

How do you get outside the displaced aether?

Perhaps you cannot remember what you wrote, let me help you.

The Milky Way's halo is the state of displacement of the aether of relativity.

The Milky Way's halo is displaced aether.

Force exerted toward matter by aether displaced by matter is gravity


Remember??? So if we are out of the halo we are out of the displaced aether. Or do you no longer believe that?

If someone throws a stone into the ocean how do you get outside of the displacement of the water by the stone while remaining in the ocean?

So now you do not believe that the displaced aether clumps or forms halos around galaxies.

Do you just write whatever pops into your mind irrespective of what you previously wrote?
 
Yeah. I’ve seen that bit before.


Back at you…(By the way, I can’t help it if you don’t understand the following question.)

mpc755, is it not true that you agree that two balls in the water tank gedanken that origin set out do not displace the same amount of water?

The experiment is performed in space in a closed container. The ball is placed into the middle of the tank. All of the water in the tank is displaced.
 
Again with the useless analogies!



Perhaps you cannot remember what you wrote, let me help you.

The Milky Way's halo is the state of displacement of the aether of relativity.

The Milky Way's halo is displaced aether.

Force exerted toward matter by aether displaced by matter is gravity


Remember??? So if we are out of the halo we are out of the displaced aether. Or do you no longer believe that?



So now you do not believe that the displaced aether clumps or forms halos around galaxies.

Do you just write whatever pops into your mind irrespective of what you previously wrote?

The halo is not out of the aether. The halo is in the aether. What the halo is is the state of displacement of the aether. The aether never stops being displaced by the Milky Way. However, the effects of the displacement are no longer measurable.
 
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