Extant Experiments and Push Gravity

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19 years 7 months ago #12544 by tvanflandern
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by buffoil</i>
<br />G as measured by both methods runs all over the place from 6.6x10^-8 to 6.7x10^-8. As a longtime fan of push gravity, I'm a little disappointed, and I'd be delighted if someone could explain to me why there's no correspondence, or if my reasoning is incorrect.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">Your reasoning is fine, but your intuition has misled you. Constraints on the amount of shadowing by Earth indicate the the graviton flux coming up is smaller than the flux coming down by roughly one part in 100 million. See <i>Pushing Gravity</i> or our "Gravity" CD for details. Seeing that small difference over a distance of just a meter or so in a laboratory would be well beyond our best current technology. -|Tom|-

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