Journal of Aeronautics & Aerospace Engineering

Journal of Aeronautics & Aerospace Engineering
Open Access

ISSN: 2168-9792

+44-77-2385-9429

Abstract

The Electrical Nature of Gravity

Scott Franklin Sibley*

Gravity was established as electrical in nature because the unit electrical charge calculated for gravitation based on measured G (1.4396077 × 10-34 C), adjusted for composition, agrees nearly perfectly (within 0.014%) with the calculated gravitational charge (1.4399644 × 10-34 C), based on the square of the velocity of light, where c2=(8.8.9875518 × 10-16 m2/s2 × primary electrical charge (1.602176487 × 10-19 C), the product of which is entirely electrical. (c2 × 10-32 m2/s)2 was calculated and derived, a priori, as the ratio of secondary to primary electrical charge (e2/e1). Gravitational charge (e2), a new constant (1.4399644 × 10-34 C), was calculated in Coulombs to 8 significant figures. G was calculated and derived to within 0.05% of its measured value, using c2; primary charge; the electrical constant; the magnetic constant; and the weighted average mass number to atomic weight ratio of the milky way galaxy. The composition dependence of G was established. G, with new units, were restored as: G=6.6775860 × 10-11 NN × (C2)(s2)(m-2). Gravity is a probable source of electromagnetism. Gravity was calculated to be net attractive. The variability of G in the milky way galaxy is explained.

Published Date: 2024-09-30; Received Date: 2024-01-22

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