|
Post by Pincho Paxton on Sept 4, 2019 15:38:29 GMT
I can't figure out suction cups using real physics so something must be missing...not sure what... probably gravity.
I know that the scientific version is that air pressure is high on the outside, and low inside the cup as it tries to regain its shape... but those aren't real physics.. as in... they are words without corresponding quantum physics.
The quantum physics are somehow strange. Anyway I will figure it out eventually, but in the mean time I think that something is missing even from the regular physics.
Pincho Paxton
|
|
|
Post by Pincho Paxton on Sept 4, 2019 17:41:06 GMT
It has something to do with friction, and rubber conforming to a surface, and interlocking that seems to have something missing. To lift an object you need resistance behind what you are moving which is often gravity converting into magnetism. With rubber suckers it seems that the resistance is ahead of the moving body, but it can't be. So you would need to conform the rubber into hooks, or maybe add some gravity collisions into the fractals of rubber.
There are no pull forces, so this has to be converted into push forces. The problem at first is that scientists accept pull forces which means that nobody cares that they don't exist. So I have to say that something is missing, and scientists have to look harder for something that they don't care about.
Pincho Paxton
|
|
|
Post by Pincho Paxton on Sept 6, 2019 23:53:50 GMT
Still trying to figure it out. Something about rubber, and trees, and how they grow against gravity. This suction force is doing something that people have missed, because people think that magnets pull things. Nothing pulls anything, so that makes the suction cup a challenge.
|
|
|
Post by Pincho Paxton on Sept 7, 2019 0:03:53 GMT
So I thought, the best place to find a solution to any problem is on my own site, so I looked back to 2014... Atoms automate Physics Of Gravity, and MagnetismRebound physics... The quantum holes of propagation pass each other to create a rebound effect... ...not bad! If negative mass holes passed each other it could reverse propagation so that the rubber is propagating backwards. Well that's OK to keep me away from this subject for awhile. Pincho Paxton
|
|