If gluons attract each other for their charge, how can you predict that attraction without some sort of "bent space" since they have no mass? I mean, I don't know how to measure how a force acts on something which has no mass, except that way it was done with light and gravity
If gluons attract each other for their charge, how can you predict that attraction without some sort of "bent space" since they have no mass? I mean, I don't know how to measure how a force acts on something which has no mass, except that way it was done with light and gravity
MultiGalmeida 1 month ago
@MultiGalmeida they have momentum, f=dp/dt
MultiGalmeida 1 month ago
Can't we make A spaceship that goes light year speed with that knowledgeably?
BRYGUY1037 9 months ago
isnt the weak force the only force which particles have mass?
nybotheveg 1 year ago