Measurements are what they are. The gravity of the Earth is very slightly weaker at the equator than it is at the poles. This happens to be because the Earth isn't perfectly spherical and bulges at the equator.
The Mass of the Earth
The mass of the Earth has never been directly measured. It's calculated using the radius of the Earth, the value of g we get from a ball drop experiment (acceleration due to gravity), and the gravitational constant, G.
A fixed or established place: מָכוֹן – makon
The universe has an absolute frame of reference: the Earth is at the center. This is why the observable universe is a sphere of cosmological bodies which has an even distribution in every direction that we look.
Absolute Frame of Reference
The idea that the presence of God dwells in a specific place, as a theme, doesn't get picked up until King David wanted to build a temple. Up until that time the Lord used a tabernacle as the center of worship.
The ISS isn’t Zero-G
If Earth is the center of gravity of the observable universe, then the observable universe is in the gravitational field of Earth. The strength of the field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from Earth.
A Unified Field Theory
Hell is the source of Earth's gravitational field, it's iron-rich so it produces its magnetic field, and its rotation causes its electric charge (dipole moment). This resolves gravitation with electromagnetism into a unified field theory.
Spatial Orientation and the Weak Nuclear Force
The preferred spatial direction of the weak nuclear force is evidence for an absolute frame of reference within the broad narrative of scripture, and is compatible with our unified theory of everything.
October 10th
Sir Isaac Newton gave science the mathematical tools it needed to deny the existence of heaven and hell. Unfortunately the tools require two assumptions which just happen to be wrong.
