Re: Will Somebody PleaseTell bz What an Inertial Frame is.
- From: Aristotle <wandering_philosopher@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 08 Jul 2005 07:49:48 GMT
On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 20:47:30 GMT, H@..(Henri Wilson) wrote:
>On Tue, 05 Jul 2005 11:47:10 GMT, Aristotle
><wandering_philosopher@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>>
>>>>But even neutrons can shift around if enough gravitational
>>>>force is available, leading to a neutron star that looks
>>>>a bit like an egg than a sphere (though it would require
>>>>another similar egg close by). It's all a matter of
>>>>finding the lowest energy level.
>>>
>>>very true. Even neutron stars could be ellipsoidal.
>>
>>Now wait a minute. You claim that neutron stars do not experience
>>tides. How is it deformed into an ellipsoid withoput gravity?
>
>It is spinning rapidly around its own axis.
>....ellipsoidal....why should it have tides and who cares if it does anyway.
>
>Am I the only source of your physics education?
I see it CAN be deformed by spinning, But they are immune to tides and
hence gravitiational forces?
Henri I pray to God that you are not teaching science ANYWHERE
.
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