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Gravitons and Planetary Heating
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21 years 11 months ago #3463
by Quantum_Gravity
Reply from Randall damron was created by Quantum_Gravity
I believe it could cause heating, but not an eventual explosion because there would in my idea be not enough gravitons to collide to make enough heat to explod a planet heat will get out of our planet somehow, call it planet sweating off heat
The intuitive mind
The intuitive mind
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21 years 11 months ago #3474
by Jeremy
Replied by Jeremy on topic Reply from
<BLOCKQUOTE id=quote><font size=2 face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id=quote>quote:<hr height=1 noshade id=quote>
Can the flow of gravitons colliding with planets cause heating and eventual explosion?
Mark Vitrone
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According to Tom they can. A great deal of discussion of this goes on in the Pushing Gravity gravity book.
Can the flow of gravitons colliding with planets cause heating and eventual explosion?
Mark Vitrone
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According to Tom they can. A great deal of discussion of this goes on in the Pushing Gravity gravity book.
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21 years 11 months ago #3785
by MarkVitrone
Replied by MarkVitrone on topic Reply from Mark Vitrone
After further thought, I am curious about fusion/fission processed inside planets. If the mantle of a planet is neutron reflective can explosions occur when the core hits a critical mass? Also planetary gas or liquid cores are under different than intuitive conditions. Perhaps some thought on this in conjunction with the graviton effect may shed some light? I have to read pushing gravity as well. So I will defer from further conversation until I get more input to think about. MV
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21 years 11 months ago #3596
by Jim
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The inner structure of spheres needs to be reinvented because gravity will not allow a structure anything like current being currently designed. There is no way gravity can allow a dense core to exist in any star or planet. The mass is centered at the geometric center of a sphere but gravity is not centered there. As a result the internal structure is totally different than what you have been taught.
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21 years 11 months ago #3602
by MarkVitrone
Replied by MarkVitrone on topic Reply from Mark Vitrone
I was thinking of how uncompressible liquids are and how under heat they expand. In a liquid (molten) core with gravity pressing on the surface it is no surprise about how changing the crust is and must be.
MV
MV
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21 years 9 months ago #4545
by Mac
Replied by Mac on topic Reply from Dan McCoin
Core heating by gravity was predicted by UniKEF and was first detected indirectly by NASA in 1964. There is a correlation to heat flow from the earth and gravitional intensity at the surface.
I can't say I disagree with Tom without understanding his basis but I find it hard to believe that it could explode a planet unless somehow black body radiation failed.
The earth currently has black body radiation GREATER than our solar input.
The core heat build up certainly plays a role in earths dynamics, quakes, volcaneos, etc.
Mac
I can't say I disagree with Tom without understanding his basis but I find it hard to believe that it could explode a planet unless somehow black body radiation failed.
The earth currently has black body radiation GREATER than our solar input.
The core heat build up certainly plays a role in earths dynamics, quakes, volcaneos, etc.
Mac
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