trevorjohnson83
Gold Member
- Nov 24, 2015
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If heat uses space as a medium, but absorbs into a material rather then bouncing off of it, can the wavelength of heat be thought similar to a low bass frequency of sound which is much more absorbent into seismic then high pitched sounds?
Could heat from the nucleus squeezing space be the electron shells? Where the heat of the electron can't squeeze space harder then it is from the gravity field? A planet's gravity field which is like a huge vacuum, creates heat inside the planet, So the stronger the vacuum of gravity the hotter it is. I guess a planet is sort of like a stuck vacuum motor at its center with a constant heat that it doesn't shed off because of the universal medium. Do electron shells then prove that there is activity of weight and gravity from within the nucleus?
Could heat from the nucleus squeezing space be the electron shells? Where the heat of the electron can't squeeze space harder then it is from the gravity field? A planet's gravity field which is like a huge vacuum, creates heat inside the planet, So the stronger the vacuum of gravity the hotter it is. I guess a planet is sort of like a stuck vacuum motor at its center with a constant heat that it doesn't shed off because of the universal medium. Do electron shells then prove that there is activity of weight and gravity from within the nucleus?