originalpckelly
New member
If you place a circle halfway in and out of the gravity well of a planet, shouldn't the circle be distorted in such a way that pi is no longer equal to 3.14blahblahblah, but rather some other ratio? Gravity is really the distortion of space/time so it should do this shouldn't it?
:withstupid:
Einstein appears to have assumed that the face of a theoretical clock would be uniformly distorted, but indeed, if placed any way in the area of space distorted by a large mass, the clock's face shouldn't be completely circular. The distortion is not uniform. I'm attempting to mathify some ideas I've had lately about the interrelationship between probability and gravity, in an effort to possibly explain why planets don't do all the weird junk electrons and other small particles do. I think explaining/proving it in terms of pi and distortion of pi is the best way to go.
Of course, that is reliant upon my basic assumption that pi can indeed be distorted being true. So, doc, why does my watch slow down at 6 and speed up at 12?
:withstupid:
Einstein appears to have assumed that the face of a theoretical clock would be uniformly distorted, but indeed, if placed any way in the area of space distorted by a large mass, the clock's face shouldn't be completely circular. The distortion is not uniform. I'm attempting to mathify some ideas I've had lately about the interrelationship between probability and gravity, in an effort to possibly explain why planets don't do all the weird junk electrons and other small particles do. I think explaining/proving it in terms of pi and distortion of pi is the best way to go.
Of course, that is reliant upon my basic assumption that pi can indeed be distorted being true. So, doc, why does my watch slow down at 6 and speed up at 12?
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