Gravity can be caused by the difference of Coulomb's constants
Yoji Hagiya

TL;DR
This paper proposes that gravity may originate from a tiny difference in Coulomb's constants for attraction and repulsion, supported by calculations suggesting a potential link between electrostatic forces and gravity.
Contribution
It introduces a novel hypothesis that gravity results from a slight variation in Coulomb's constants, challenging traditional views of electrostatic and gravitational forces as separate.
Findings
Calculated that a marginal increase in Coulomb's constant for attraction could produce gravitational effects.
Provided a theoretical basis linking electrostatic differences to gravity.
Suggested a new perspective on the unification of fundamental forces.
Abstract
Coulomb's constant is defined as a value for attraction and repulsion. However, it is strange that only one value can be applied for both attraction and repulsion. A very little difference between coulomb's constant for attraction and coulomb's constant for repulsion can be the source of gravity. The author verified if that theory is correct by calculating with slightly bigger coulomb's constant for attraction.
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Taxonomy
TopicsInertial Sensor and Navigation
