Nah, I still need to get a laptop, so I am currently on my PC.Jedamethis said:-All Hail Britannia Snip-
Wait, are you lying under your bed with a laptop? 0.o
Which is under my bed.
Not enough space in my bedroom for it not to be >.>
Nah, I still need to get a laptop, so I am currently on my PC.Jedamethis said:-All Hail Britannia Snip-
Wait, are you lying under your bed with a laptop? 0.o
Lukeje said:I would be more worried about all the oxygen floating off into space to be honest.
All things with mass are affected by gravity. The only reason for the buoyancy of helium and whatnot is because it's lighter than the stuff around it. It's like when you mix two liquids together and the lighter one rises to the top while the heavier one forms the bottom.TheNumber1Zero said:I don't think oxygen is affected by gravity, seeing as it isn't stuck to the ground and such.Lukeje said:I would be more worried about all the oxygen floating off into space to be honest.
I'm probably wrong though, but I felt like saying it all the same.
Ohhh, is it a bed like this?Greyfox105 said:Nah, I still need to get a laptop, so I am currently on my PC.Jedamethis said:-All Hail Britannia Snip-
Wait, are you lying under your bed with a laptop? 0.o
Which is under my bed.
Not enough space in my bedroom for it not to be >.>
So... would the reversal make it where the heavier goes to the top and the lighter goes to the bottom?Souplex said:All things with mass are affected by gravity. The only reason for the buoyancy of helium and whatnot is because it's lighter than the stuff around it. It's like when you mix two liquids together and the lighter one rises to the top while the heavier one forms the bottom.
Hmmm... well, we'll have to balance this somehow. Houses are now strong enough to survive!TheNumber1Zero said:Bits of the roof might dig into my side a little, but I'd be fine.
Then again:That would mean my house would be forced away too, and that would be bad.force everything away from it
So worse case scenario, we all die.
It is affected by it. It just spreads out enough to fill the area around the planet fairly evenly.TheNumber1Zero said:I don't think oxygen is affected by gravity, seeing as it isn't stuck to the ground and such.Lukeje said:I would be more worried about all the oxygen floating off into space to be honest.
I'm probably wrong though, but I felt like saying it all the same.
It's equal, but in the other direction.Stollos said:Exactly how intense is this force? Are we talking 'zero' gravity where we float to the roof gently, or the equal force of gravity as it is, but reversed? Because then i'd be falling 3 metres and landing on my head. Which would likely kill me. And there is little discussion value in that, i'm sorry to say.
void ReverseGravity
{
Earth.Gravity = new GravitationalField(Earth.Gravity * -1)
}
Good to know, and I've already gotten the jist of the Oxygen thingy, so now I shall ask questions based on blunt observations.Tharwen said:-Snip-
It's pretty much a certainty. The earth revolves around the sun due to gravitational attraction. The sun also doesn't expand from heat pressure due to gravity. We'd spin off from the sun and freeze to death, whilst the sun would eject all its material. The Earth would also disintergrate.TheNumber1Zero said:So worse case scenario, we all die.