Even Black Holes (the most massive objects in Space) can gain mass and grow due to feeding upon other Masses (Gas, Planets, Stars - even other Black Holes etc.) - There is no known limit in Mass!
To cut a long story short:
It is a little too complicated to explain it here because it cannot be described with words, only with mathematical formulae!
By the way: there is NO script at all!
Last edited at 2017/10/30 22:27:06 by Scientific Accuracy
You have to think a little bit "relativistic" - the left and the right body have the same velocity and same direction vector -> they start as "twins" in relative rest - follow just these two with the camera (unfollow the red one) and you'll see it, only the gravity turns their relative rest into an "unrest" very quickly.
Again:
1. It has to start by 2 relatively motionless bodies with equal masses and ANY attraction force > zero.
2. The 3rd body (equal mass and attraction as the other 2!) start location has to be exactly in the middle between the "twins" - this is also the center of mass of the 3-body system!
3. How to direct the vel.-vector of the 3rd body: connect the outer twins with a thought straight line - the velocity vector of the 3rd body has to be in an angle of 57° in respect of that line! (it is mirror-compliant or "mirrorable"!)
4. The unknown variable is the start velocity of the 3rd body (depending on the gravity force of the bodies!) And here you need to do the maths!
No it is not a bird and the binary "colors" and numbers in each bo aren't there for no reason.
Okay here's the explanation:
There are 15 vertical lines of boxes and the numbers per line equal 15, too.
It is an image within a 15x15 square matrix!
A box is a simple instruction-unit. Example: 5white or 5black are the instructions for 5 white boxes / 5 black boxes in series (horizontal) - then "read" the next box for the next instruction and so on... line per line... and then you should be able to see the hidden image in the square!
Okay that's a good point, but think about "relatively in rest"! They have the same speed&angle (only at t=0) - that means the same velocity-vector - it means you can cancel that out if the point of view would be the center of mass between these 2!
The 3rd in the middle has twice the velocity in the 180° inverted direction (absolute, not relative) - that means all 3 bodies together have a center of mass (barycenter) that is on coordinates x=0 y=0 and it is not moving away (relative & absolute)
At the beginning I really had the 2 outer bodies not just in relative rest, but even in absolute! But the clue was, that through the momentum of the 3rd, the barycenter drifted away.
For "glueing" the barycenter to fixed coordinates, i had to "move" the 2 outers, too!
Do you understand what I tried to explain you? (I'm sorry for my bad English!) =D
Last edited at 2017/11/03 07:01:55 by Scientific Accuracy