A beam of electrons should bend downward in earths gravity. Has that ever
been measured?
On Jan 30, 2018 11:56 AM, "Brian Ahern" wrote:
> The forces are different by 10*36, so comparisons are impossible to
> measure.
>
>
> --
> *From:* John Berry
> *Sent:* Tuesday, Ja
On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 6:58 PM, wrote:
This would be true if gravity was actually a force. If OTOH it is merely a
> distortion of spacetime, then as far as the photon is concerned it is just
> going
> "straight ahead". IOW it just follows the shape of the space it is
> traversing.
>
Another tho
From: H LV
A beam of electrons should bend downward in earths gravity. Has that ever been
measured?
Experiments to determine the Force of Gravity on Single Electrons and Positrons
• FRED C. WITTEBORN
• & WILLIAM M. FAIRBANK
• Nature volume 220, pages 436–440 (02 November 1968)
My comment.
In reply to Eric Walker's message of Wed, 31 Jan 2018 13:00:53 -0700:
Hi,
[snip]
>Now let the electron and positron stray over the event
>horizon at time t=0 and annihilate at time t=1. At t=0, the black hole now
>has M + 1.022 MeV mass. At t=1, the black hole is back to its previous
>mass of M,
On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 6:45 PM, wrote:
Another problem with this scenario is that time slows as the event horizon
> is
> approached, so nothing ever actually makes it into a black hole, at least
> nothing that wasn't there already when it formed. (Assuming that time
> actually
> stands still at
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