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Bizzare title right?
It is winter here in Chicago and no soaring to speak of - except for the Bald Eagles that have just in the last few weeks been seen in the Fox River valley for the first time in many, many years. So I was watching a very interesting PBS Nova episode on YouTube about the latest news and theories in Physics. One of the concepts mentioned is that gravity works by warping the space-time continuum. Whoa. Because gliders are always falling because of "gravity", I thought you all might want to study up during this slack season. Maybe it will help me fly better. Yeah...right. Enjoy - John http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wy9gXKwRpXc |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 07:48:37 -0800 (PST), JohnDeRosa
wrote: Bizzare title right? It is winter here in Chicago and no soaring to speak of - except for the Bald Eagles that have just in the last few weeks been seen in the Fox River valley for the first time in many, many years. So I was watching a very interesting PBS Nova episode on YouTube about the latest news and theories in Physics. One of the concepts mentioned is that gravity works by warping the space-time continuum. Whoa. Because gliders are always falling because of "gravity", I thought you all might want to study up during this slack season. Maybe it will help me fly better. Yeah...right. Yes, I'm working on a Spacetime Straightening App for smartphones. Just tap the STRAIGHTEN button, gravity turns off all around your sailplane, and up you go. But don't leave it on too long...;-) rj |
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On Feb 19, 5:25*pm, Ralph Jones wrote:
On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 07:48:37 -0800 (PST), JohnDeRosa wrote: Bizzare title right? It is winter here in Chicago and no soaring to speak of - except for the Bald Eagles that have just in the last few weeks been seen in the Fox River valley for the first time in many, many years. So I was watching a very interesting PBS Nova episode on YouTube about the latest news and theories in Physics. *One of the concepts mentioned is that gravity works by warping the space-time continuum. Whoa. *Because gliders are always falling because of "gravity", I thought you all might want to study up during this slack season. Maybe it will help me fly better. *Yeah...right. Yes, I'm working on a Spacetime Straightening App for smartphones. Just tap the STRAIGHTEN button, gravity turns off all around your sailplane, and up you go. But don't leave it on too long...;-) rj Ah, but Ralph, your app will drain the smartphone battery in femtoseconds. All you need to do is warp space-time to shift the gravity vector about one degree so your L/D is infinite. The same app could distort the higgs field to reduce the glider's mass at the bottom of thermals and increase it as you leave the thermal for in- flight variable wing loading. |
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On 2-19-2012 15:48, JohnDeRosa wrote:
Bizzare title right? It is winter here in Chicago and no soaring to speak of - except for the Bald Eagles that have just in the last few weeks been seen in the Fox River valley for the first time in many, many years. So I was watching a very interesting PBS Nova episode on YouTube about the latest news and theories in Physics. One of the concepts mentioned is that gravity works by warping the space-time continuum. Whoa. Because gliders are always falling because of "gravity", I thought you all might want to study up during this slack season. Maybe it will help me fly better. Yeah...right. Enjoy - John http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wy9gXKwRpXc Dunno...I think gliders themselves naturally affect the space-time continuum. An hour in a glider is considerably shorter than an hour at work. |
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Are gliders acted upon by gravity, or does the earth suck?
Paul "Scott" wrote in message .. . On 2-19-2012 15:48, JohnDeRosa wrote: Bizzare title right? It is winter here in Chicago and no soaring to speak of - except for the Bald Eagles that have just in the last few weeks been seen in the Fox River valley for the first time in many, many years. So I was watching a very interesting PBS Nova episode on YouTube about the latest news and theories in Physics. One of the concepts mentioned is that gravity works by warping the space-time continuum. Whoa. Because gliders are always falling because of "gravity", I thought you all might want to study up during this slack season. Maybe it will help me fly better. Yeah...right. Enjoy - John http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wy9gXKwRpXc Dunno...I think gliders themselves naturally affect the space-time continuum. An hour in a glider is considerably shorter than an hour at work. |
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At 10:46 20 February 2012, Scott wrote:
On 2-19-2012 15:48, JohnDeRosa wrote: Bizzare title right? It is winter here in Chicago and no soaring to speak of - except for the Bald Eagles that have just in the last few weeks been seen in the Fox River valley for the first time in many, many years. So I was watching a very interesting PBS Nova episode on YouTube about the latest news and theories in Physics. One of the concepts mentioned is that gravity works by warping the space-time continuum. Whoa. Because gliders are always falling because of "gravity", I thought you all might want to study up during this slack season. Maybe it will help me fly better. Yeah...right. Enjoy - John http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wy9gXKwRpXc Dunno...I think gliders themselves naturally affect the space-time continuum. An hour in a glider is considerably shorter than an hour at work. According to Einstein that is relativity in action, "It's like when you sit next to a pretty girl for one hour, and it feels like an minute, as opposed to when you sit on a hot stove for one minute, and it feels like an hour." That is relativity |
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Watched this last evening. Thanks for pointing it out.
The idea that we are living a reality which is a projection of the actual (currently unknown) edge of the universe is probably as hard to grasp as the world being round for those long before us. Amazing how far we have come from our little perch in the middle of nowhere. Cool stuff. Thanks again. Sean |
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