Subject: Re: Tampere Anti-Gravity Experiments From: Date: 1996/09/05 Sender: news@news.cern.ch (USENET News System) References: <322BC0C4.4408@skypoint.com> <50j1vb$gui@newsbf02.news.aol.com> <50lmph$b8e@stratus.skypoint.net> Organization: CERN European Lab for Particle Physics Newsgroups: sci.physics On 5 Sep 1996, John Logajan wrote: > > No need for me to think twice, since I got it right the first time. > > Air molecules just outside the shadow have an additional force (gravity) > pulling them down which is not experienced (to the same degree) by air > molecules inside the shadow. Enmass, as a column, these shadowed air > molecules have a buoyancy just as if they were lighter due to being > hydrogen or helium, for example. > This argument is a little bit silly. There is no such thing as gravitational shielding, so arguing about the effects of it is meaningless. You may as well argue how many pixies you would need to turn a turbine in a power station, as you are just as able to use pixie power as gravitational shielding. There are too many real and valid problems in physics for physicists to waste their time thinking ideas out of star trek. I suggest that you leave the science fiction to the writers, and look at something a little more pertinent to today's problems.