In the TOS episode "Court Martial", Spock said, "if I let go of a hammer on a planet that has a positive gravity, I need not see it fall to know that it has in fact fallen." Which caused Christopher to post in a TOS forum thread recently:
"What's always gotten me about that line is the implication that there are planets with negative gravity. How could that happen? How would they even form?"
I suggested: "Spin acceleration greater than the gravity generated by the planet?", and "A strong electromagnetic core that pulls the pieces of the forming planet together despite the acceleration force from the spin? (Pieces would presumably be made of some element highly susceptible to magnetism.) Seems possible, but if I were the first starship captain to come across such a world, I would suspect artificial construction."
And now I've found this.
Anyone have any thoughts on these, or any other possible suggestions on how such a world could exist? I'm posting this in this forum because I'm not looking for Treksplanations ("Q did it") but actual scientifically supportable explanations for how this could work in the real universe.
"What's always gotten me about that line is the implication that there are planets with negative gravity. How could that happen? How would they even form?"
I suggested: "Spin acceleration greater than the gravity generated by the planet?", and "A strong electromagnetic core that pulls the pieces of the forming planet together despite the acceleration force from the spin? (Pieces would presumably be made of some element highly susceptible to magnetism.) Seems possible, but if I were the first starship captain to come across such a world, I would suspect artificial construction."
And now I've found this.
Anyone have any thoughts on these, or any other possible suggestions on how such a world could exist? I'm posting this in this forum because I'm not looking for Treksplanations ("Q did it") but actual scientifically supportable explanations for how this could work in the real universe.