- #36
marcus
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Lino said:Mark, I thought that it would be more distance between "unbound" objects. In what sense are the objects bound?
Regards,
Noel.
Heh, I think I see what you are driving at, Lino---but what I see is more a verbal ambiguity than a disagreement. A distance between bound objects (in Mark's words) could mean the distance between two objects, each of which is bound, but the two objects are not bound gravitationally to each other.
So the distance could be the distance between two rocks, or two galaxies, or two gravitationally bound clusters of galaxies. Each of them separately is a "bound object" because held together by its own internal forces.
But it's assumed (as I read Mark's post) that the two bound objects do not form a larger bound system. So it is an "unbound" pair of bound objects.
Ordinary language is frustrating, so many chances for ambiguity.