bookmark_borderTheir There

[Intro]
They’re there
(Their there)
You’re your
(Two, too)

[Verse 1]
What can I say
Now you’ve put it that way
Is it whether
We can weather the weather

[Chorus]
Homophones
(Not found home alone)
Homophones
(Found your mind blown)

[Bridge]
They’re there
(Their there)
You’re your
(Two, too)

[Verse 2]
How can I say
We’ll live to see another day
The principal principle
It’s its rationale

[Chorus]
Homophones
(Not found home alone)
Homophones
(Found your mind blown)

[Bridge]
They’re there
(Their there)
You’re your
(Two, too)

[Chorus]
Homophones
(Not found home alone)
Homophones
(Found your mind blown)

[Outro]
Don’t desert
(Your dessert)

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderDiscombobulated

[Intro]
Discombobulated
Is that even a word
(If so, how absurd)
What is it rated?

[Verse 1]
I’ve lost my train of thought
After, all… why not?
Turned upside down
(And spun around)

[Chorus]
Discombobulated
Is that even a word
(If so, how absurd)
What is it rated?

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Confused (amused)
Disoriented (tormented)
Thrown into a state of disorder
(Into a fate we’ll discover)

[Verse 2]
Seemed to have lost my bearings
So if you don’t mind sharing
Where am I now
(Got lost somehow)

[Chorus]
Discombobulated
Is that even a word
(If so, how absurd)
What is it rated?

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo]
Confused (amused)
Disoriented (tormented)
Thrown into a state of disorder
(Into a fate we’ll discover)

[Chorus]
Discombobulated
Is that even a word
(If so, how absurd)
What is it rated?

[Outro]
Discombobulated
(Completely overrated)

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

Also found on the album “Reggae Way” by Narley Marley

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderYou Call That Close?

[Intro]
Close?!?!
You call that close
(Well, almost)
You know what I mean…
{That’s extreme)

[Verse 1]
Set the controls
For close to the sun
Close enough for rock n’ roll
Let’s have some fun

[Chorus]
You bring out the smiles….
3 million miles
Close?!?!
You call that close
(Well, almost)

[Bridge]
When it’s 3 million degrees
(Don’t need to worry you’ll freeze)
That’s close enough
(To study this stuff)
You know what I mean…
{That’s extreme)

[Verse 2]
Set the controls
For the closest star
Setting lofty goals
Let’s how far we are

[Chorus]
You bring out the smiles….
3 million miles
Close?!?!
You call that close
(Well, almost)

[Bridge]
When it’s 3 million degrees
(Don’t need to worry you’ll freeze)
That’s close enough
(To study this stuff)
You know what I mean…
{That’s extreme)

[Chorus]
You bring out the smiles….
3 million miles
Close?!?!
You call that close
(Well, almost)

[Outro]
When it’s 3 million degrees
(Don’t need to worry you’ll freeze)
You know what I mean…
{That’s extreme)

A SCIENCE NOTE
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe, launched on August 12, 2018, just made an unprecedented close approaches to the Sun to study its outer atmosphere, the corona.

On December 24, 2024, the probe achieved a historic milestone by flying within approximately 3.8 million miles (6.1 million kilometers) of the Sun’s surface, the closest any human-made object has ever been.
New York Post

During this perihelion, the Parker Solar Probe reached speeds up to 430,000 miles per hour (about 700,000 kilometers per hour), setting a new record for the fastest human-made object.

The mission’s primary objectives include studying the Sun’s corona to understand the origins of solar wind and the mechanisms behind solar energetic particles. The data collected is crucial for comprehending space weather phenomena that can impact Earth’s technology and astronauts in space.

Equipped with a robust heat shield, the probe is designed to withstand extreme temperatures exceeding 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit (about 1,377 degrees Celsius) as it ventures through the Sun’s outer atmosphere.

This recent close approach is part of a series of planned perihelia, with the probe scheduled to continue its mission, including two more close flybys next year. The next significant data transmission from the probe is expected on December 27, 2024.

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderFloccinaucinihilipilification

[Intro]
(In summation:)
Floccinaucinihilipilification

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Incomprehensibilities
(Utilities of the facilities)

[Verse 1]
Can I understand
The words at hand
Or will I demand
That they be banned!

[Chorus]
Incomprehensibilities
(Utilities of the facilities)
Incomprehensibilities
(Realities of my abilities)

[Bridge]
(In summation:)
Floccinaucinihilipilification

[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo]

[Verse 2]
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
(If you want to sound atrocious under hypnosis)

[Chorus]
Incomprehensibilities
(Utilities of the facilities)
Incomprehensibilities
(Realities of my abilities)

[Bridge]
(In summation:)
Floccinaucinihilipilification

[Chorus]
Incomprehensibilities
(Utilities of the facilities)
Incomprehensibilities
(Realities of my abilities)

[Outro]
In summation:
(Floccinaucinihilipilification)

ABOUT THE SONG
What are the longest words in English and their meanings?

Scientific and Technical Terms

  1. Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (45 letters)
    • A lung disease caused by inhaling very fine silica particles; essentially an extremely long synonym for “silicosis.”
  2. Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia (36 letters)
    • Ironically, the fear of long words.
  3. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious (34 letters)
    • A playful, nonsensical word popularized by the movie Mary Poppins to describe something extraordinarily good.
  4. Antidisestablishmentarianism (28 letters)
    • Refers to the opposition to the disestablishment of the Church of England in the 19th century.

Chemical Names

  • Methionylthreonylthreonylglutaminylalanyl…isoleucine (189,819 letters)
    • The full chemical name for the protein “titin,” the largest known protein. It’s so long that it’s impractical to write or pronounce fully.

Uncommon or Playful Words

  1. Floccinaucinihilipilification (29 letters)
    • The act of describing or regarding something as unimportant or worthless.
  2. Pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism (30 letters)
    • A mild inherited disorder resembling hypoparathyroidism but without the associated endocrine abnormalities.

Longest Word in Literature

  • Honorificabilitudinitatibus (27 letters)
    • Found in Shakespeare’s Love’s Labour’s Lost, meaning “the state of being able to achieve honors.”

Longest Non-Technical English Word

  • Incomprehensibilities (21 letters)
    • Refers to the state of being difficult or impossible to understand.

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderMisheard

[Verse 1]
Her mind is symphony twisted
She’s got the Mercedes bends
Doctor’s all double fisted
With regards, he sends

[Chorus]
Welcome my friends
To the show that never ends
Please step right this way
Everything will be O.K.

[Bridge]
Why? Excuse me while I kiss this guy
(In a purple phase these days)
Doctor, doctor (can you save her)
Doctor, doctor (what’s the blues news)

[Verse 2]
Wrapped up like a douche
Another rumor in the night
Turn up the juice
Mama, see the light

[Chorus]
Welcome my friends
To the show that never ends
Please step right this way
Everything will be O.K.

[Bridge]
Why? Excuse me while I kiss this guy
(In a purple phase these days)
Doctor, doctor (can you save her)
Doctor, doctor (what’s the blues news)

[Chorus]
Welcome my friends
To the show that never ends
Please step right this way
Everything will be O.K.

[Outro]
What did you say
(I never heard it that way)

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

Also found on the album “Reggae Way” by Narley Marley

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderPer Second per Second

[Intro]
Thirty-two feet
(Per second per second)
Oh, that’s deep
(Square aware)

[Verse 1]
Which falls faster
An egg or a rock
Why at the same clock
Though the egg’s a disaster

[Chorus]
Thirty-two feet
(Per second per second)
Oh, that’s deep
(Square aware)

[Bridge]
Falling (falling fast)
Falling faster (as time goes past)
32, 64, 128
(An exponential rate)

[Verse 2]
Now I’ve come to know
How fast things go
There for a second…
I had to reckon

[Chorus]
Thirty-two feet
(Per second per second)
Oh, that’s deep
(Square aware)

[Bridge]
Falling (falling fast)
Falling faster (as time goes past)
32, 64, 128
(An exponential rate)

[Chorus]
Thirty-two feet
(Per second per second)
Oh, that’s deep
(Square aware)

[Outro]
I’m aware
(Squared there)

A SCIENCE NOTE

What Does “Per Second Per Second” Mean?

  • “Per second per second” refers to acceleration, the rate at which velocity changes over time. For example:
    • If an object’s velocity increases by 10 m/s1 every second, it has an acceleration of 10 m/s2.
    • This is read as “meters per second squared” or “meters per second per second.”

How Fast Does an Object Fall?

  • Near the surface of the Earth, objects fall with an acceleration due to gravity, denoted by gg, approximately 9.8 m/s2 (or 32 ft/s2 — 32 feet per second per second).
  • Assuming no air resistance, the speed of a falling object can be calculated using the formula:v=g⋅t
    where:

    • v is the velocity,
    • g=9.8 m/s2
    • t is the time in seconds.

    Example:

    • After 1 second: v=9.8 m/s     v = 9.8.
    • After 2 seconds: v=19.6 m/s  v = 19.6.
    • After 3 seconds: v=29.4 m/s  v = 29.4

Do Objects Fall at the Same Speed Regardless of Weight?

  • In the absence of air resistance (in a vacuum), all objects fall at the same rate regardless of their mass. This is because the force of gravity acts equally on all objects relative to their mass.
    • Example: A feather and a hammer will fall at the same rate in a vacuum (as demonstrated during the Apollo 15 moon landing).
  • With air resistance, heavier or denser objects usually fall faster because they are less affected by drag. For example:
    • A bowling ball falls faster than a feather in Earth’s atmosphere due to the feather’s higher air resistance relative to its weight.

Key Equations and Concepts

  1. Distance Fallen Over Time:d=1/2 gt2 .
  2. Terminal Velocity:
    • In real-world conditions, objects reach a maximum falling speed (terminal velocity) when air resistance balances the force of gravity.  This is why rain does not kill you.
  3. Galileo’s Discovery:
    • Galileo showed that objects fall at the same rate regardless of their weight, overturning Aristotle’s earlier belief that heavier objects fall faster.

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderHomonyms

[Intro]
(Hummana, hummana…)
Homonyms

[Verse 1]
Rock
(A mineral or stone)
Rock
(A genre of tone)
Rock n’ roll!

[Bridge]
(Hummana, hummana…)
Homonyms

[Chorus]
Out of the jam
(Traffic blockage)
In to a jam
(On a musical stage)

[Verse 2]
Charge
(To energize)
Charge!
(Forward, realize)
Rock n’ stroll!

[Bridge]
(Hummana, hummana…)
Homonyms

[Chorus]
Out of the jam
(Traffic blockage)
In to a jam
(On a musical stage)

[Bridge]
(Hummana, hummana…)
Homonyms

[Outro]
I meant our goal
Is rock n’ roll

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderOh, That’s What You Meant

[Intro]
Oh, that’s what you meant
For a moment….

[Verse 1]
I didn’t know
(I thought you said go)
But you said stop
(Meanings swap)

[Chorus]
Oh, that’s what you meant
I misunderstood
The message sent
Didn’t come through so good

[Bridge]
First is last
{Last is first)
Dying in the past
(Drowning in thirst)

[Verse 2]
I must have misconstrued you
Jumbling up your intentions
Missed your point of view
In the complications

[Chorus]
Oh, that’s what you meant
I misunderstood
The message sent
Didn’t come through so good

[Bridge]
First is last
{Last is first)
Dying in the past
(Drowning in thirst)

[Chorus]
Oh, that’s what you meant
I misunderstood
The message sent
Didn’t come through so good

[Outro]
Oh, that’s what you meant
For a moment….

From the album “Oh, That’s What You Meant” by The Beatless Sense Mongers

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderThe Weight of the World

[Intro]
I feel as though…
The weight of the world is upon me
(Er, ah… under… under me)

[Verse 1]
Quite some feat!
(Acting at my feat)
Sure does defeat
(My attempts to be free)

[Bridge]
Anchoring me

[Chorus]
Alas, Atlas
(Misunderstood)
Held fast, alas
(Bound by the foot)
Where the foot’s put….

[Bridge]
Found to be bound
(Anchoring me to the ground)
For my own good
(Understood)
Bound at the feet
(Oh, sooo sweet)

[Verse 2]
Now I think on it
(So glad you do your bit)
Of restraining me
(From breaking free)

[Bridge]
Anchoring me

[Chorus]
Alas, Atlas
(Misunderstood)
Held fast, alas
(Feet like concrete)
(Bound by the foot)
Where the foot’s put….

[Bridge]
Found to be bound
(Anchoring me to the ground)
For my own good
(Understood)
Bound at the feet
(Oh, sooo sweet)

[Outro]
Oh, so sweet
(To be bound at my feet)
For what it’s worth
(Keeps me down to earth)

A SCIENCE NOTE
The phrase “having the weight of the world on one’s shoulders” originates from Atlas, a figure in Greek mythology. Atlas was a Titan condemned by Zeus to hold up the heavens for eternity as punishment for his role in the Titanomachy (the war between the Titans and the Olympian gods). Over time, this was often misunderstood or symbolically represented as Atlas holding the Earth on his shoulders, which has become a common image in art and culture.

Today, the phrase is used metaphorically to describe someone burdened by immense responsibility or pressure. However, in this instance it is used metaphorically, and perhaps metaphysically, about physics. That is to say, gravity is often misunderstood as a weight on your shoulders, when in reality, it’s a force acting at your feet, anchoring you to the ground.

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

Also found on the album “Reggae Way” by Narley Marley

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderBending of Light

[Intro]
The weakest force
(Can move light off course)
Bending the rays sending

[Verse 1]
Able to bend light
(Without a single sound)
It’s a bird…
(No much more plain)

[Chorus]
It’s gravitational
(Sensational)
Black hole’s kryptonite
(Makes the light dark as night)
With all it’s might!

[Bridge]
Bending (Lensing)
(Shift, shift)
Shapiro Delay
(Hey! Hey! Hey!)

[Verse 1]
Super force
(Moving mountain and men)
Even light’s thrown off course
(To the rescue again and again)

[Chorus]
It’s gravitational
(Sensational)
Black hole’s kryptonite
(Makes the light dark as night)
With all it’s might!

[Bridge]
Bending (Lensing)
(Shift, shift)
Shapiro Delay
(Hey! Hey! Hey!)

[Chorus]
It’s gravitational
(Sensational)
Black hole’s kryptonite
(Makes the light dark as night)
With all it’s might!

[Outro]
The force
(To throw light off course)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Gravity affects light through a phenomenon predicted by Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. This effect occurs because gravity is not just a force acting on objects with mass but rather a warping of spacetime caused by mass and energy. Here’s how gravity affects light:

1. Gravitational Bending of Light (Gravitational Lensing)

When light passes near a massive object, such as a star or black hole, the curvature of spacetime around that object causes the path of the light to bend. This bending is known as gravitational lensing and has been observed in phenomena such as:

  • The bending of starlight around the Sun during a solar eclipse, first observed in 1919.
  • Images of distant galaxies being distorted into arcs or multiple images due to the presence of a massive galaxy cluster between the source and observer.

2. Gravitational Redshift

Light escaping from a strong gravitational field loses energy, which results in a decrease in its frequency and an increase in its wavelength. This is known as gravitational redshift and is observed in light emitted from stars or near black holes. The effect was first confirmed in 1960 in laboratory experiments.

3. Black Holes and Event Horizons

In extremely strong gravitational fields, such as those near a black hole, the warping of spacetime can become so intense that light cannot escape beyond a certain boundary known as the event horizon. This creates the appearance of a “black” hole from which no light can reach an outside observer.

4. Shapiro Delay

When light travels through a region of space influenced by a massive object, its path is not only bent but also takes longer to traverse. This additional delay, known as the Shapiro delay, has been used to confirm the effects of gravity on light using radar signals sent to planets and their moons.

In all these effects, gravity demonstrates its ability to influence light, even though light has no mass. This influence highlights the deep connection between spacetime geometry and energy as described by relativity.

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderFree Fall

[Intro]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Weightlessness
(Less ness)

[Verse 1]
Accelerating uniformly
(All… not just part of me)
Feels as if there’s no gravity
(Acting upon me)

[Bridge]
Weightlessness
(Less ness)
More or less
(Weightlessness)

[Chorus]
Can I change trajectory
(So that it doesn’t kill me)
After all…
(In free fall)

[Verse 2]
Too bad head for the ground
(Sorry to let you down)
Wait till the impact of gravity
(Hits me)

[Bridge]
Weightlessness
(Less ness)
More or less
(Weightlessness)

[Chorus]
Can I change trajectory
(So that it doesn’t kill me)
After all…
(In free fall)

[Bridge]
Weightlessness
(Less ness)
More or less
(Weightlessness)

[Chorus]
Can I change trajectory
(So that it doesn’t kill me)
After all…
(In free fall)

[Outro]
After all…
(In free fall)
It not the drop…
(It’s the)
[Break]
Stop!

A SCIENCE NOTE
When you are in free fall, you do not feel the effects of gravity because you and the object you’re falling with (including your body) are accelerating at the same rate. This state is known as “weightlessness” or “microgravity.”

Here’s the reasoning:

  1. Gravitational Acceleration: Gravity pulls everything toward the Earth at the same acceleration, which is approximately 9.8 meters per second squared (m/s²) near the Earth’s surface (32 feet per second per second).
  2. Free Fall: When you’re in free fall, you and your surroundings are all accelerating toward the Earth at this same rate. There’s no force pushing against you (such as the ground or a seat), so you don’t feel your weight. In other words, you and everything around you are “falling” together at the same rate, so there is no relative motion to make you feel the force of gravity.
  3. Lack of Contact Force: On the ground, you feel the normal force from the surface you’re standing on, which counteracts the force of gravity, creating the sensation of weight. In free fall, since you’re not in contact with any surface, there’s no normal force, so you experience what is effectively “weightlessness.”

In essence, you still experience gravity, but you don’t feel it as a force because everything is accelerating uniformly. This is why astronauts experience weightlessness while orbiting Earth—they are in a state of continuous free fall, but because their velocity is also tangential to the Earth’s surface, they do not hit the ground.

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

Also found on the album “Reggae Way” by Narley Marley

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderPossessed by Gravity

[Intro]
She’s got me…
(Possessed by gravity)
Or do I posses her
(I’m not sure)
I see…
(That’s heavy)

[Verse 1]
Do you ask why…
We don’t fly through the sky
Sail off into space
Without leaving a trace

[Bridge]
It’s by virtue
(Of the force within you)

[Chorus]
Generate (a gravitational field)
We create (an attraction)
Bringing us down (down, down) to Earth
(To enjoy our birth)

[Bridge]
She’s got me…
(Possessed by gravity)
Or do I posses her
(I’m not sure)
I see…
(That’s heavy)

[Verse 2]
Do you know why…
We don’t we don’t have to even try
To find our way home
… we’re never alone

[Bridge]
It’s by virtue
(Of the force within you)

[Chorus]
Generate (a gravitational field)
We create (an attraction)
Bringing us down (down, down) to Earth
(To enjoy our birth)

[Bridge]
She’s got me…
(Possessed by gravity)
Or do I posses her
(I’m not sure)
I see…
(That’s heavy)

[Chorus]
Generate (a gravitational field)
We create (an attraction)
Bringing us down (down, down) to Earth
(To enjoy our birth)

[Outro]
The virtue
(Of the force within you)
I see…
(That’s heavy)

A SCIENCE NOTE
It would not be correct to say that humans are gravity, but it would be accurate to say that humans possess gravity.

According to Newton’s law of gravitation, every object with mass, including humans, exerts a gravitational pull. However, the gravitational pull of a human being is extremely small and negligible compared to larger objects like Earth. The term “possess gravity” refers to the fact that humans, like all objects with mass, generate a gravitational field, but it’s far too weak to have any noticeable effects in everyday life.

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderFundamental Force

[Intro]
Strong Nuclear > Electromagnetic > Weak Nuclear > Gravitational
(Observational)

[Verse 1]
Four forces (fundamental)
Enforces (the natural)
You can call the law
And witness in awe

[Chorus]
Four work horses
(Fundamental forces)
Forces of nature
(Sure to endure)

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Synth Solo]
What is gravity?
(A force of nature for sure)
So then what are we
(A fundamental force, of course)

[Verse 2]
The more of “we”
The more gravity
Impacts are wait
[Break}
Weight
To set things straight

[Chorus]
Four work horses
(Fundamental forces)
Forces of nature
(Sure to endure)

[Bridge]
What is gravity?
(A force of nature for sure)
So then what are we
(A fundamental force, of course)

[Chorus]
Four work horses
(Fundamental forces)
Forces of nature
(Sure to endure)

[Outro]
Glad to be
(Of gravity)

A SCIENCE NOTE
The four fundamental forces of nature govern how matter interacts in the universe. These are:

1. Gravitational Force

  • What It Does: Governs the attraction between objects with mass. It keeps planets in orbit, binds galaxies, and gives objects weight on Earth.
  • Strength: Weakest of the four, but acts over infinite distances.
  • Mediating Particle: Hypothetically, the graviton (not yet observed).
  • Key Feature: Always attractive, never repulsive.

2. Electromagnetic Force

  • What It Does: Governs the interaction between charged particles. It’s responsible for electricity, magnetism, and light.
  • Strength: Stronger than gravity but acts over infinite distances.
  • Mediating Particle: Photon.
  • Key Feature: Can be both attractive and repulsive, depending on the charges involved.

3. Strong Nuclear Force

  • What It Does: Binds protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei, overcoming the repulsion between positively charged protons.
  • Strength: The strongest force, but acts only over very short distances (about the size of an atomic nucleus).
  • Mediating Particle: Gluons.
  • Key Feature: Essential for the stability of matter.

4. Weak Nuclear Force

  • What It Does: Responsible for processes like radioactive decay and nuclear fusion (e.g., in the Sun). It changes one type of particle into another.
  • Strength: Stronger than gravity but weaker than the electromagnetic and strong forces. It acts over very short distances.
  • Mediating Particles: W and Z bosons.
  • Key Feature: Vital for the creation of elements in stars.

Summary of Strengths:

From strongest to weakest:
Strong Nuclear > Electromagnetic > Weak Nuclear > Gravitational

Each force plays a critical role in shaping the physical world, from the smallest atomic scales to the vast cosmic structures.

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

Also found on the album “Reggae Way” by Narley Marley

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderTurning Round

[Intro]
The Earth orbits the sun
(Round and round)
The moon orbits the Earth
(Round and round)

[Verse}
What makes us go round
The physics can be found
Einstein said it most clearly —
General Theory of Relativity

[Chorus]
The Earth orbits the sun
(Round and round)
The moon orbits the Earth
(Round and round)

[Bridge]
You spin me
(Round and round)
The ground I’ve found
(Round and round)

[Verse}
Who knows… shaping the cosmos
The physics of going round found
Einstein’s ingenuity —
General Theory of Relativity

[Chorus]
The Earth orbits the sun
(Round and round)
The moon orbits the Earth
(Round and round)

[Bridge]
You spin me
(Round and round)
The ground I’ve found
(Round and round)

[Chorus]
The Earth orbits the sun
(Round and round)
The moon orbits the Earth
(Round and round)

[Outro]
I’ll always be found
(Turning round)

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderMeters per Second Squared

[Intro]
Is it what I ate?
(Or nine point 8)
Meters per second squared
(I’m there)
Pulling me down
(Pound per pound)

[Bridge]
(Explanation:)
Acceleration
(Moving while I’m standing still)
Still…
Moving (velocity due to gravity)
Moving me

[Chorus]
Is it what I ate?
(Or nine point 8)
Meters per second squared
(I’m there)
Pulling me down
(Pound per pound)

[Verse]
Distance (divided by)
(Dividing velocity by time)
Seconds squared (thought it rare)
Now! I’m right there.

[Bridge]
(Explanation:)
Acceleration
(Moving while I’m standing still)
Still…
Moving (velocity due to gravity)
Moving me

[Chorus]
Is it what I ate?
(Or nine point 8)
Meters per second squared
(I’m there)
Pulling me down
(Pound per pound)
Down, down, down
(Pound per pound)

[Outro]
Pulling me down
(Pound per pound)
Down, down, down
(Pound per pound)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Weight

  • Definition: Weight is the force exerted on an object due to gravity.
  • Properties:
    • It is a vector quantity (it has both magnitude and direction, pointing toward the center of the gravitational source).
    • Weight depends on the gravitational field strength, so it changes based on location.
    • Measured in newtons (N) in the SI system.
    • Calculated using the formula: W=m⋅g 
    • Where:
      • is weight.
      • is mass.
      • is the gravitational acceleration (approximately 9.8 m/s^2 on Earth).
      • The “s” in 9.8 m/s2 stands for seconds, and the unit as a whole—meters per second squared (m/s²)—represents acceleration.

        Explanation of m/s2

        • m: Stands for meters, a unit of distance.
        • s2: Refers to seconds squared, which comes from dividing velocity (meters per second, or m/s) by time (seconds, or s).

From the album “What is Gravity?” by Daniel

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous