What is the size of a Black hole?
Dear Sanny:
"Sanny" wrote in message
...
What is the mass & charge of Graviton?
Mass is expected to be very large last I heard.
Charge is zero.
In that case Say there is a Particle smaller than
an electron.
Electrons are point particles. Nothing smaller. But you mean
"less massive". Neutrinos are much less massive.
And it gives out a Graviton, So Graviton must
be lighter than electron mass.
Actually I believe the graviton mass is larger than the mass of
most molecules.
So Lightest particle X Then it exchanges a
graviton. In case it is throwing out a graviton Its
mass must be greater than Graviton. Else
we will violate "Conservation of Mass Principle."
Conservation of mass has been discredited. Since it is an
exchange, it occurs in essentially zero time, and the world at
large is none the wiser.
And I do not understand What is the shape of
Graviton.
It is shaped like a unicorn, since it is only theoretical, and
has never been observed. Do not strain at this, it is a waste of
your time.
How it is exchanged? In case it is exchanged
how that creates an attraction?
What do you mean "how is it exchanged"? It was invented to be
"that which can merge continuous spacetime with the quantum
realm". That it *is* exchanged is a given, because we can see
gravitation at work all around us.
Gravitons are "virtual exchange particles".
Just like the "virtual photons" that produce the
effect we call charge, they travel at all possible
speeds (no c limit), and all possible paths. See
gravitons are part of quantum mechanics, and
are blind to either distance or time.
Say 2 Mass are 1 lightyear apart how much
time it will take for the gravitons to reach from
one mass to other. Do each mass throws
Graviton in all Direction?
Zero time, just as in GR.
No, exchange particles have unique, known source-destination.
Say an electron is throwing Graviton in all
directions. At what time interval these
gravitons will be thrown?
Not thrown in all "directions", thrown to all members of the
Universe. Thrown continuously.
And if an electron is throwing 1000s of gravitons
in each direction how will "Conservation of Mass
Principle." Mantained?
"Conservation of mass" is not a law.
Exchange is "round trip".
This is not worth you straining over, unless you want to learn
the underlying physics. Did you read the links I posted before?
David A. Smith
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