Science, asked by Lucky9001, 1 year ago

Things in vaccum defy the laws of physics?

Answers

Answered by anshrajput
0
My understanding has always been that it does from conventional science courses, but really thinking about it, I was wondering if this is really the case.

To my limited understanding there is a theory that there are gravitons that act as particles to pull two different masses together. If these gravitons really are the physical particles of gravity, then a so called "vacuum" that had gravity wouldn't be a vacuum at all. A real vacuum should lack these particles, and thus, lack gravity?

Anything in the vacuum should then implode due to its own gravitational attraction within itself? If this is the case, could we say in a real vacuum, external gravity does not exist?

Answered by ʙʀᴀɪɴʟʏᴡɪᴛᴄh
0

Explanation:

9 Objects Invented to Defy Physics. ...

Perpetual Motion See-Saw – a concept of continuous motion. ...

Gömböc – the object that corrects itself. ...

The Uphill Water Fountain – a fountain that flows upwards. ...

One-sided bulletproof glass - protect and shoot at the same time. ...

Starlite – The miracle material which went into hiding.

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