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Pushing Gravity

This document summarizes the theory of "pushing gravity", which proposes that gravity is caused by a shower of particles hitting masses and imparting momentum rather than an attractive force. It explains how this model could explain anomalies observed during solar eclipses. It also shows how the pushing gravity model derives the inverse square law of gravity and describes challenges with constructing an antigravity shield based on this theory.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
149 views1 page

Pushing Gravity

This document summarizes the theory of "pushing gravity", which proposes that gravity is caused by a shower of particles hitting masses and imparting momentum rather than an attractive force. It explains how this model could explain anomalies observed during solar eclipses. It also shows how the pushing gravity model derives the inverse square law of gravity and describes challenges with constructing an antigravity shield based on this theory.

Uploaded by

redlteut
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Pushing gravity is also referred to as the Le Sage model or Majorana shielding.

There are subtle differences in their models which are hard or impossible to mea
sure.
"Pushing gravity" means that gravity is not a force that is caused by some "attr
active" particle that is negotating the force between two masses, but that gravi
ty is caused by a shower of particles or rays that hits the mass and thus moves
it a little, imparting their impulse. This might explain the observations of Mau
rice Allais on a pendulum (like Foucault's Pendulum), which got disturbed in its
normal regular motion during a solar eclipse, an effect which might have been c
aused by change in gravity.
Put simply, this is like a giant game of billiard:
Imagine that the entire universe outside of a body(a mass) is radiating a partic
le shower that pushes the body in all directions, effectively cancelling out (or
if not cancelling, being unnoticeable because the entire local area is subject
the same way to it). The body being hit doesn't need to absorb the impact of all
waves/particles that travel through or near it, maybe it catches and shields on
ly a portion of the particle shower. For example, the neutrino is a similar part
icle, most of them can just pass through Earth. Were would all those particles i
n the particle shower come from ? It could be a form of cosmic radiation that ha
s been around since the Big Bang, and maybe it would be replenished by emissions
, like Ettore Majorana thought, or it would decrease slowly (which would mean lo
wer gravity in the far, far future!).
Consider that a big body like the sun is blocking out a portion of the particle
shower. There is now less pressure from that direction, so Earth tries to move t
owards the sun, a force which we call gravity. The sun will block out a portion
of the entire sky of a size that decreases with the square of the distance, so w
e got 1/r2; the probabilty for blocking the shower increases with the mass of th
e sun m1 and the probability for receiving a particle in the shower and catching
its impulse is proportional to m2, the mass of Earth.
So we get gravity = (m1*m2)/r2, which is exactly The Law of Gravity normally use
d for two bodies since Newton.
Back to the Allais effect, so if three bodies line up, like the sun, the moon an
d Earth during an eclipse, the gravity of the middle body(the moon) should be sm
aller than expected because the other body is blocking the particle shower a bit
already. So one would get the observed change in gravity.
Measuring the effect should allow calculation of the intensity/catching/shieldin
g number of the shower, but so far(2004), this is just a theory about gravity. I
f you would construct an Antigravity shield, which would absorb a lot of the par
ticles in the shower, then the shield would probably be blown away very quickly
by the impact of all the particles. In effect, it would have a really high mass,
so this would better be called supergravity.
In 2004, this theory was investigated and made popular by Chris Duif from Delft.

(c)[email protected]

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