Re: Gravitational Constant

Jerry W. Decker ( (no email) )
Thu, 26 Feb 1998 16:58:57 -0800

Hi Folks!

This is the email I sent back in response;
------------------------------------------
You wrote;
> research done in the 20's proved that there was no gravitational
> constant. Apparently diamagnetic materials were less affected by
> gravity (either emitted less or less attracted to other masses less,
> probably both)....

I think you are referring to Townsend Browns reports. The Brown
experiment as I recall it did not establish that gravitation was a
constant, it simply showed that different elements or mineral compounds
RESPONDED differently to gravity.

You quoted from Davidsons paper;
> The charge of an electron, the Rydberg constant, and
> <<< gravitational constant >>>
> are also derivable from simple fluid mechanics 1, 2 treatment of the
> aether...

I'll ask him about that and you can also, his email is rivas@theriver.com

I never noticed that before....it disputes everything I've ever read or
understood about gravity. It obviously has a gradient and gravity in
many areas of the earth differs...it is far from uniform.

I'll forward your email to Dan and see what he has to say about it.
---
Jerry W. Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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