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6.1 GRAVITATIONAL FORCE AND FIELD FIELDS AND FORCES
6.1 GRAVITATIONAL FORCE AND FIELD FIELDS AND FORCES

... physical law. It is now an accepted fact that if a physical law is indeed to be a law and not just a rule then it must be universal. Newton was also very careful to specify the word particle. Clearly any two objects will attract each other because of the attraction between the respective particles o ...
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... from it should never be made available to students except by instructors using the accompanying text in their classes. All recipients of this work are expected to abide by these restrictions and to honor the intended pedagogical purposes and the needs of other instructors who rely on these materials ...
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... value problem of Fig. 1 can be reduced to that of Fig. 2共b兲, which is a standard textbook problem.3 The solution for the potential outside the plates is then given by Eq. 共9兲, which has been evaluated in a plane of symmetry perpendicular to the plates. A uniform field is obtained just outside and ne ...
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... photon, gravitons convert to negative and positive color charges and magnetic color too. These color charges and magnetic color form the electromagnetic energy. Electromagnetic energy converts to matter and anti-matter such as charged particles. Charged particles use gravitons and generate electroma ...
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... the radius) acts as a battery that produces a current in its own resistance: therefore, the potential difference between two points arbitrarily chosen on a circle is zero. Hence, as it must be, each circle is an equipotential line. The observed phenomenon may be described as due to an increased radi ...
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... are recorded by various optical techniques. These effects are very useful for the characterization of macromolecular structures and their dynamics in solution. One of the field-induced effects is alignment of molecular dipoles, which can be detected at a very high sensitivity by measurements of the ...
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... Two charges of the same sign are placed a certain distance apart. There is only one point in space near them where the electric field is zero. Which, if any, of the following statements about that point is true? A. It cannot be on the line joining the charges. B. It must be on the line joining the ...
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... interactions not allowing creation of magnetic monopoles? To understand that, we have to find out where else magnetic interactions occur besides between permanent magnets. The simple experiment shows that if a compass needle is placed near a wire carrying electric current it will deflect if original ...
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Speed of gravity

In classical theories of gravitation, the speed of gravity is the speed at which changes in a gravitational field propagate. This is the speed at which a change in the distribution of energy and momentum of matter results in subsequent alteration, at a distance, of the gravitational field which it produces. In a more physically correct sense, the ""speed of gravity"" refers to the speed of a gravitational wave, which in turn is the same speed as the speed of light (c).
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