Saeko wrote:It did, though.
No, it most certainly did not.
If, on a college level physics exam, you are asked to determine the balance of forces for a ball sitting on a table,
You have obviously never taken a college physics course. Such a question is completely trivial and would never be asked on a college physics exam because it requires no calculation or analysis. Just like your brain-dead "question" to me.
then you had better identify the force that the ball exerts on the table, the force that the table exerts on the ball, the force that the table exerts on the ground, and the force that the ground exerts on the table.
One could certainly identify such forces given the mass of the ball and table, but such a question would be suitable for at most an introductory high school physics course. You just think high school physics is college physics because you have never taken either.
If you just say the forces all sum to zero, your professor will give you zero credit.
Wrong. That is the correct answer. You obviously know nothing whatever about it.
You would've known that if you'd ever even taken phys 101 at any university. But you didn't.
Oh, but I did (Physics 115, actually, then Geophysics 210 and 310, planetary physics). It is
you who did not. That is why you don't know anything about atmospheric physics and can't even ask a sensible question about it.
But you didn't, TtP. You didn't.
Oh, but I did. You, however, did not.
I'm right, though.
No, you are objectively wrong, and it is time you found a willingness to know that fact. You have proved you just don't know any atmospheric physics because you have no formal education in physics beyond the high school level, if that. None. You are now merely trying to save face by presuming to judge my physics bona fides, but are succeeding only in further humiliating yourself. Sad, really. You should quit while you're behind.