Re: Milligram Scale

From: Phedon Tsiknopoulos <phedon21t_at_yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, 23 Jan 2014 23:21:26 -0800

That's right! Blame it also on gravitons, the carriers of gravitation.

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 23, 2014, at 11:15 PM, Tapio Linkosalo <tapio.linkosalo_at_iki.fi> wrote:

>
> On Fri, Jan 24, 2014 at 7:51 AM, William D. gowen <wdgowen_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> I think there's some kind of alien technology in those scales. I've observed the same thing about weight position not affecting the reading and I really don't understand how that works.
>
> It is all based on the theory of relativity (by Einstein): gravity, as a matter of fact, is not a force as itself, but is based on how an object with mass curves the 4-dimensional time-space around it (remember those illustrations of space as a sheet of rubber, where planets are figured as marbles that bend the rubber sheet around them?). The milligram scale, then, measures the curvature of space. And for this curvature, it really does not make difference if you move the object one inch this way or that.
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> -Tapio-
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> I'm just joking, of course :-)
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Received on Thu Jan 23 2014 - 23:21:34 CET

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