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Question:

How to make shoes less slippery?

I have a dance performance en pointe on a very slippery floor. I was wondering if there were any ways other than rosin that won't damage the shoe that will help them stick. Thanks!

Answer:

I can only see Roman Reigns turning face. I think after seeing what The Wyatts done on Raw last night I'm hoping for a Wyatts vs Shield feud.
It is not really bending. That is just a happy image that is used to prop up our thought processes so that we can try to understand what the mathematics is telling us. It is rather like those pictures you see in quantum mechanics books that try to give you a picture of what is happening in the quantum world - a world of complex numbers that we cannot really picture. What is happening is that the equations describing the various metrics of space and time no longer look the way they do when there is no mass present. The solutions to those equations give the impression that space has become curved or that the time axis is no longer orthogonal to the spacial axes. Remember that in general relativity the metric tensor is related to the mass energy tensor so effectively one determines the other. Relativity itself really says nothing about beyond the universe. These colourful expressions have been bolted onto relativity in the hope of making further progress (which to date has not shown much promise of being forthcoming). The rubber sheet analogy of the previous answerer is a helpful picture but the problem is that it presupposes an independent gravity to pull the rolling ball down, whereas in relativity, the distortion of space IS the gravity. Also in reality, even if you had a distorted sheet that could affect the trajectory of a rolling ball, without presupposing gravity to cause the ball to roll, you cannot simulate the effect of gravity n a stationary ball. I'll leave you to figure that one out. Check out the links below. Thee may be something that answers your questions there. Cheers!

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