ok, vacuum energy thought of to be the direct result of dark energy being present in our universe has been veryfied (as far as i remember) by putting to metal plates at a small distance to each other, measuring the diference of such fluctuations between both plates and the outside, as a force.
(was it called casimir-effect ?)
Now i think .. does this ammount vary under gravitational influence of some sort, and if so can you give any numbers to it ?
anyone tried the experiment on the ISS for example ?
any numbers at all to get an imagination about how strong the effect is ?
2007-07-26
11:23:40
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3 answers
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asked by
blondnirvana
5
in
Science & Mathematics
➔ Astronomy & Space
ah, and i don't mean what might happens if i use a vacuum cleaner onboard the ISS :P
2007-07-26
11:24:41 ·
update #1