Quizzes & Puzzles30 mins ago
Gravity in vacuum
Is there gravity in vacuum?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by blackeyed. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.er depends what you mean
If you mean can gravity travel through a vacuum yes, obviously space is a vacuum ( by most conventional senses ) and the moon is held in orbit around the Earth by Gravity.
But of course you need matter to create gravity in the first place and if you have matter it's not a vacuum
If you imagine a Universe without matter - a perfect vacuum then there's no gravity
Rather depends where you're drawing lines
If you mean can gravity travel through a vacuum yes, obviously space is a vacuum ( by most conventional senses ) and the moon is held in orbit around the Earth by Gravity.
But of course you need matter to create gravity in the first place and if you have matter it's not a vacuum
If you imagine a Universe without matter - a perfect vacuum then there's no gravity
Rather depends where you're drawing lines
so, alright, there is no gravity in a vacuum as it doesn't have any mass.
but
if u take an empty plastic(disposable) bottle n pump the air out the gets crumpled , from this i can conclude that as air goes out of the bottle the walls of the bottle crush in to replace air. alright there too
but
the same doesnt happen when u create vacuum inside a bell jar ,i.e. the glass doesnt crush in, as the glass is thicker or denser( or something else, i dont know the correct scientific term)
so, it seems like the vacuum does pull in but only upto some extent
or, alternatively, i can ask y does the plastic bottle walls rush in but the glass doesnt?
but
if u take an empty plastic(disposable) bottle n pump the air out the gets crumpled , from this i can conclude that as air goes out of the bottle the walls of the bottle crush in to replace air. alright there too
but
the same doesnt happen when u create vacuum inside a bell jar ,i.e. the glass doesnt crush in, as the glass is thicker or denser( or something else, i dont know the correct scientific term)
so, it seems like the vacuum does pull in but only upto some extent
or, alternatively, i can ask y does the plastic bottle walls rush in but the glass doesnt?
bibblebub //The plastic bottle crumples because of the pressure of the air around the bottle and the plastic is not strong enough to withstand that. Nothing to do with gravity.//
Oh yes it is. Without gravity there would be no air pressure on the outside. The crushing is done using gravitational potential energy.
Oh yes it is. Without gravity there would be no air pressure on the outside. The crushing is done using gravitational potential energy.