Friday, January 8, 2010

How does a object obtain gravity on their own ?

despite what 'top-notch' quantum theorists might think, still the most likely explanation for this is Einsteins General Relativity.





This states that anything with mass will have an effect on space-time. This 'bending' of spacetime is what causes objects to seem attracted to each other - it is an extremely complicated matter involving very hard maths. Long and short it is due to objects moving in a strait line, along curved paths....Matter tells space how to bend, and space tells matter how to move.





As of yet, not a single experiment has been found to contradict Einsteins equations, and not a single other theory can even come close to explaining/predicting what Einstein did.





So, in summary, gravity finds its origin in the warping of space-time by massive objects.How does a object obtain gravity on their own ?
This is a very interesting question.





Do you mean ';How does an object like the moon obtain gravity';. Assuming there is no other object present?





Newton proposed that two bodies with masses M and m separated by a distance d have a force of attraction between them of F = GMm/d^2 where G is the gravitational constant.


He didn't know why this force existed and nobody knows to this day. Electrostatic forces are well-known as there is an exchange of particles between the objects.


There must be an exchange of particles between the masses and this is the Higgs boson. They are looking for this at CERN to verify the theory about the nature of matter.


This is a most difficult area of physics. Einstein said that matter curved space and curved space ';caused'; gravity but he did not know then what is known now about the fundamental forces.


Unified field theory is the goal for the clever theoretical physicistsHow does a object obtain gravity on their own ?
Gravity is a function of mass; I don't believe anyone seems to know what the origin of gravity is, it's just that the greater the mass, the greater the gravity an object has.
Ben is 100% right

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