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by Kranar
1864 days ago
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I recently finished reading the first volume of The Feynman Lectures and he brings up the possibility that G may not be constant, that it may vary over time or space. The argument why G likely doesn't vary over time is that a different value of G in the past, either bigger or smaller, would be inconsistent with what we understand about the formation of the Earth. If it were bigger by even a small factor then the Earth would be closer to the Sun and hence too hot for oceans to form and vice-versa if it were smaller. Based on all current observations, G is constant. |
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Did you read the article, however? What she's mulling over is the idea of different gravitational fields, and reconciling that with quantum theory along with "classic" Newtonian and Einsteinian physics.