recently I was trying to explain to my son my understanding of electricity, atoms, electrons, gravity. Then I mentioned the space shuttle, rocket fuel, satellite tracking and tracking the space shuttle, my father, because he worked on a lot of nasa space shuttle tracking missions tracking it here in eastern Australia. And since he was educated in electrical engineering and I learned at an early age about electronics, I was kind of passing the torch to my kid. And it hits me, Making a comparison to hey water flows, that it's similar to electricity (I was explaining resisters and non conductive materials), electricity doesn't conform to gravity much does it. I mean we were running cables on our science kit and it's as plain as day, electricity doesn't give a shit about gravity. Normally with electricity, say you have a gold plated circuit board, which is extremely conductive, with very little resistance. To create resistance you need standard resisters which is all standardized with colored bands like karate belts delineating the level of resistance. In a room dimmer switch, it's actually just a variable resister that is turning the glow down. Is there any electrical resistance caused by gravity? I doubt it's much and it suddenly seems extremely interesting but I need to research first how gravity is measured. It's understood electricity and magnetism corresponding to space and solid matter are corresponding energies of attraction. I understand the principles of electromagnetism from having studied electrical theory as a young child, including some really complicated mathematics appertaining thereto and also from making an actual armature and basic motor as a 12-13 year old. I wouldn't say I'm a Nicholas Tesla when it comes to electricity, I really don't know much about it, but some of his later experiments with transmitting electricity wirelessly, that's got to really be a technology we'd have to have.
anyway this is the stair mounting video for my dance clip I'm making
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