No they don’t. The force from a wind covers over a large area above Earth, right?
Just wilfully rejecting reality will not save you.
The same wind acting on 2 different objects will apply a different force.
If you focused that wind through a small area, what happens?
You end up with faster wind.
Are you trying to suggest the force is proportional to the area of the object?
Every actual force emits energy outward, right?
No, but I get what you are getting at.
For gravity, there are 2 explanations.
One is just like magnetism and electrostatics.
It generates a gravitational field.
That field has a certain strength.
An object in that field will experience a force based upon the strength of that field, and some property of the object.
A magnet always emits energy outward at the SAME strength, yes?
In terms of field, yes. In terms of force applied to an object NO!
When you say two objects of the same mass don’t blow away the same distance when a wind hits them, it is not due to the wind being a ‘proportional’ force
Yes, it is.
Because the force of wind is proportional to the area of the object, and its shape.
So a ball with minimal area doesn't get as large a force as a long thin sheet.
because if we put a 10 ton block out and a 10 ton ball slab
Is it a ball or a slab?
How about shaping it into a long thin sheet. Then guess what? It gets blown by the wind.
Again, wilfully rejecting reality will not save you.
The wind only blows away lighter objects of ANY surface area.
Again, if that was the case a parachute would slow you down the same when it is tucked away in the bag and when it is deployed.
A sail on a boat would work just as well when deployed and tight as when folded away.
Your claims are pure BS.
It blows away grains of sand, which are little spheres, yet does not blow away a 50 lb slab of granite sticking up from the ground, which has far greater surface area than the grains of sand.
And also far greater mass.
When considering this, don't forget to consider the square-cube law.
That law means that if you take an object and double a linear dimension, any area will go up by a factor of 4x, and the volume will go up by 8x.
That means the mass to area ratio will double.
That means if you take an object and simply make it bigger, while keeping the aspect ratio the same, you will have a greater mass to area ratio, so you will need a faster wind speed to make it move the same.
A grain of sand, at its largest is 2 mm in diameter. Assuming it is a sphere, that would have an area of 12.6 mm^2, and a mass of roughly 6.7 mg.
If you want to use that same material, but make it a solid 25 kg slab, to have the same mass to area ratio you need an area of roughly 47 m^2, from a volume of 0.016 m^2.
If you made that slab 1 m wide, that means 1*w*l=0.016, while 2*(1*w+1*l+w*l)=47.
Or, to rearrange, w=0.016/l, and w=(47/2-l)/(1+l).
Solving that, you get a "slab" which is 1 m, by 23.4 m by 0.7 mm.
i.e. you need your "slab" to be thinner than the grain of sand.
Again, try an honest comparison.
The simplest is 2 sheets of paper. Take 2 identical sheets. Scrunch one up tightly into a ball, and leave the other as a sheet.
Then use a fan on them and see what happens.