(urth) Cues

O'Donnell, Tim (BOSI) Tim.O'Donnell at bankofscotland.ie
Mon Jan 19 04:59:56 PST 2009


Agreed Greg, furthermore, the image of a bowling ball resting on a tennis racket 
(as opposed to a tennis ball) is used to describe a super-dense object's effects on 
gravity.  One such object would be a black hole.

I am not fully swung by your interpretation but I am certainly more in favour 
of it than the toilet humour...

_________________________________________________________________

From: Greg Jenkins <grsjenkins at yahoo.com>
*The tennis racket that BB1 mentions is a common depiction of the
space-time continuum, a grid of "space" upon which rests a ball.
This graphical construct has been used countless times to try to aid
understanding of the mechanism of gravity.
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