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I have a couple of questions about gravity, here's my thinking:

  1. The Sun exerts a gravitational force on the Earth, keeping it in orbit.
  2. The Sun is made up of trillions of atoms, as is the Earth.
  3. The atoms in the Sun are exerting a gravitational force on the atoms in the Earth.
  4. An individual atom in the Sun is exerting a gravitational force on an individual atom in the Earth (a tiny one).

My first question: is statement 4 correct? Does the gravitational attraction between two atoms tend to zero or reach absolute zero over a specific distance?

  1. Gravitational force does not travel between two points, it exists at both points at the same time.
  2. Gravitational force can be measured.

My second question: if statement 5 and 6 are also correct, can we measure the position and mass of atoms?

enter image description here Diagram of a theoretical gravity compass: the green, pink, purple and blue points are held in a four-faced pyramid at equal distances apart. Inside each of them (grey) is a vacuum, with three arms suspending one or atoms at its centre. Movement of the atom in the X,Y,Z directions can be measured. The black and red dots are a cluster of atoms a large distance away.

In theory: knowing the distances between the four points, the forces in the XYZ within those points, and trig, you can calculate the distance to another atom (red) and repeat it to map large areas.

You can read the environment, but given a specific location in space to measure, you could also communicate over large distances, immediately, by moving an atom(s) in a particular way, e.g. back and forth (binary).

For 'reading' the environment, the fewer atoms the better right? But for 'writing' to the environment, you could use something of a greater mass (and more easily readable), even something massive. You just need to be able to measure it. Combine reading and writing to communicate.

I understand that our technology doesn't allow for this, at the least, our computers are too weak to make the trillions of huge calculations, measurement precision for tiny gravitational forces, etc. but in theory, could this work? Are there any physical impossibilities here?

Qmechanic
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    in short: no, it does not "exist at the same time" - at least not in the sense of an instantaneous propagation when something moves - it propagates at speed of light or less (in GR) And second: your four points of measurement are only sufficient to measure four atoms; above it the result is ambiguous: you cannot measure the pairs of interactions, only the sum of all – Ilja Sep 28 '16 at 15:55

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Statements 1-4 are indeed correct1. According to Newtonian gravity, any two objects with non-zero masses impart a force on each other. Additionally, the force falls off as $r^{-2}$, so the force goes to zero only as $r\to\infty$. There's no finite cutoff. Now, there are obviously distances at which the force is too small to measure, and this is especially true for bodies with very little mass, such as atoms.

Statement 5 has me confused. You could say that an object at point $p$ a distance $r_p$ from another object with mass indeed feels the force of gravity from that other object, but I'm not sure how you would define it as "existing at both points at the same time". Gravity propagates at the speed of light (see this, this, and this), so gravitational effects aren't instantaneous, but both objects will indeed feel some sort of force.

Your final conclusion involves a bit more thinking. if an object is in a potential $\Phi(\mathbf{r})$, it will feel a force, given by the equation $$F(\mathbf{r})=-\frac{d\Phi(\mathbf{r})}{dr}$$ where $\mathbf{r}$ is a position vector. If we can measure the force at a bunch of different $\mathbf{r}$, we can figure out $\Phi(\mathbf{r})$2. This, in turn, will allow us to figure out the density distribution of the matter causing the potential, by Gauss's law for gravity: $$\nabla^2\Phi(\mathbf{r})=4\pi G\rho$$ In your case, it will tell us that the object being observed is being influenced by what is essentially a point mass. This approximation works because

  1. Atoms are extremely small and have very little mass.
  2. The atoms exerting the force are far away.

We're not going to get much good information about the structure of the cluster; it will seem like a point mass to us. The force between the cluster of atoms is going to be incredibly small, and this is what makes your idea not very feasible (see Has gravity ever been experimentally measured between two atoms?). Try plugging numbers into Newton's law of gravitation, taking the two masses to be the mass of a hydrogen atom and a small cluster of hydrogen atoms. Over any reasonable distances, the force of gravity between the two is going to be pretty much impossible to measure.

Another difficult arising here is that there are plenty of other effects - electromagnetic forces and other major sources of gravity, for starters - that will make any measurable force here insignificant. Using Poisson's equation is pointless (pun not intended); it would only tell us remotely useful information if used in an isolated system composed of only these atoms.


1 Statement 2 is actually a little wrong. The Sun is, largely, composed of plasma, which includes protons which have been stripped of their elections. But I think I'm being a little pedantic, as the mass of an electron is negligible compared to the mass of a proton.
If we can only measure the potential at one point, though, we don't know much about the global behavior of the density.

HDE 226868
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  • Thanks, I thought gravity was instant! Wouldn't the system become 'isolated' in that you only read from specific locations? If you used two large masses (that you could manipulate), say a baseball sized nugget of gold in Paris, and another in Sydney, and you knew where in 3D space those nuggets were located, and measured them, what about that? Perhaps switching a electromagnetic force around the nuggets on and off, creating binary. Probably cheaper to send an email ;) – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 15:26
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    @JohnnyRockex I was defining an isolated system as something free from all effects but those of the objects being studied. So the Paris-Sydney example wouldn't work too well, because the Earth is obviously going to have effects! Also, regarding the speed of gravity, see http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/7041/56299, http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/26742/56299, and of course http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/5456/56299. – HDE 226868 Sep 28 '16 at 15:30
  • But even given the effects of the earth, like shooting through the middle of the earth and all that magnetic magma(?) down there screwing with a direct reading, if it affects the four points equally, you can discount it no? – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 15:45
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    @JohnnyRockex That depends on what you mean by "four points". If you're studying an atom on Earth, there are two more bodies directly affecting it (celestial bodies aside) - the Earth, and the other cluster of atoms. Different parts of the Earth won't cancel each other out; the second part of the shell theorem doesn't apply to objects outside a sphere. – HDE 226868 Sep 28 '16 at 15:47
  • I mean the four points in the diagram (green, pink, blue, purple). Let's ignore the magma for a second, and pretend there is nothing to distort the gravitational force. The green point is being pulled at x+j towards the nugget in Sydney, the pink by x+n, blue x+p, purple x+k. The nugget moves or whatever, now it's green(x+j+m), pink(x+n+m), blue(x+p+m), purple (x+k+m). Measuring 'm' is your 'one' in the binary. Switch on the earth and you have green(x+j+m+e), pink(x+n+m+e), blue(x+p+m+e) and purple(x+k+m+e). Because the points are tightly packed, you cancel e and watch for m. – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 15:59
  • @HDE226868 So your answer is, that the effects are just too small to measure, and are disturbed by greater effects. I disagree: no, there is a theoretical impossibility to measure more than four positions by knowing the net force at four points only. And this assumes you know the mass of the objects to locate! – Ilja Sep 28 '16 at 16:00
  • You'd be measuring 12 forces green (xyz) pink (xyz) blue (xyz) purple (xyz). If you were to move a big mass around the 'compass' locally the forces required to keep the atoms in place / the blocking of laser or whatever would reflect that big mass moving around. Move that mass far away, the effect is still there but tiny, as long as its precise enough (nth decimal down the line) and you know where to look in space. You can calculate 'where' in the changing forces you would expect it to be, e.g. X 12.23499349HERE93 Y12.23499348HERE93 Z12.23499346HERE93 – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 16:17
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    @JohnnyRockex Ah, I think I see what you're saying. Then yes, maybe those effects would be less of an issue, but still, the forces between the atoms would be tiny. – HDE 226868 Sep 28 '16 at 16:31
  • @Ilja I'm not sure I fully understand your remark, but I stand by that the effects would be too small to measure. – HDE 226868 Sep 28 '16 at 16:32
  • In practice too small to measure over large distances, like Paris-Sydney, but in theory it should work, right? If we were throwing a gold baseball (ouch) around the room with a compass in it, it would read the location in the 4xyz. And the read would be at the speed of light, right? – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 16:38
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    @JohnnyRockex I suppose it would work in theory, yes. – HDE 226868 Sep 28 '16 at 16:52
  • Let's build it! Better than fibre optics! :D thanks for your help – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 16:54
  • That was my point: also in theory: no, it won't work. If you know the forces of all masses in the universe except one, you can measure this one, no problem (theory! :)). But if you have more unknowns, the result is ambiguous. – Ilja Sep 28 '16 at 17:11
  • Because you can't "concentrate"/"focus" on one unknown, you always see the sum. – Ilja Sep 28 '16 at 17:13
  • @Ilja Ah, I see what you're saying. Yes, that's correct. By the way, Ilja and Johnny Rockex, this comment thread is getting a bit crowded. If there are any more questions, I suggest we move the discussion to The h Bar, the chat room for Physics Stack Exchange. – HDE 226868 Sep 28 '16 at 17:17
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Gravity becomes negligible at large distances but theoretically it is never completely non-existent.

Fluctuations in gravity propagate at the speed of light. For example if the Sun were to suddenly disappear, our orbit wouldn't change until 8 minutes afterward, the same time that we'd see the Sun disappear.

At the quantum level things get a little tricky because you don't have the options you think we have. For example these arms that you talk about, what are they made out of? How are they attached to the atom? etc.

Yogi DMT
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  • I imagined the atom or cluster would be suspended in space using three 'arms' perhaps magnetic in nature, I don't know. Was wondering if in theory it might work. It would similar to flashing a torch from the ISS to Voyager, if you know where to look. – Johnny Rockex Sep 28 '16 at 15:37