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| Tags: causes, curves, dark, did, flat, gal, matter, rotation |
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#1
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Craig Markwardt wrote in message ...
Since then Craig Markwardt has independently processed the raw data using IDL software and has confirmed both the sense and magnitude of the anomaly: http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0208046 George Yes, I know. He made a very nice job. However: my interpretation is the correct one: the collected residual is the cumulative Hubble redshift for the distance of signal travel. Also, it verifies the value of independently calculated theoretical Hubble wavelength doubling time constant at Hd=4.234 billion years. Your statements are incorrect. None of my plots or conclusions are based on accumulation of frequencies or times. In particular, Figure 3 of my paper shows the observed minus calculated frequency for a *single* round trip for a transmission on a particular calendar date. The residuals reflect that the received frequency is slightly higher than expected (ie, a slight blue shift). Therefore, your conclusions associating the Pioneer effect with the Hubble recession are unsubstantiated and irrelevant. CM You are using data provided to you. We were talking about beat frequencies as I recall. I really would like to get to the end of this issue, but 'somehow' it does not seem possible without a new experiment. Which is proposed by JPL... You have not provided any substantial criticism of my analysis, only innuendo. On the other hand, I can claim that my analysis included all major effects including spacecraft motion, earth motion, earth rotation, precession, nutation, polar motion, and (optionally) tectonic drift. All of these effects are clearly detectable in the Doppler signal, and thus verify that the analysis was performed correctly. What I suspect: the data is already a cumulative sum of residuals, presented as a function of accumulated light time. You - all NASA related parties - use this data to present it as a calendar day related data. It is simply not true, but you get the verification of your bigbangology. Which is the object of the exercise. I think so, you are not in position to define the validity of my conclusions. Nobody is. You are making unsubstantiated and incorrect claims about work that I have done myself. No, I'm not. The magnitude of the Pioneer anomaly is too large by many orders of magnitude to be the Hubble effect, and it is apparent as a slight *increase* in frequency compared to the expected Doppler frequency. PLease check it: if you take the 'calendar time' for the 'signal travel time' you get the magnitude just perfect for the Hubble effect. Also, since the record is beat frequency - and the insinuation of sign convention - the (*increase*) of frequency means *decrease* of really observed frequency - as it been reported in the early days. I leave no ambiguity in my paper, and further I fully agree with the Anderson (2002) result, in terms of magnitude and sign. CM I agree with that. You made a very nice verification: the effect is really there! HOwever, you just don't have the clear picture what's really there. And I agree with Anderson at al.: it is necessary to make dedicated experiments to find out. That's all! Aladar http://stolmarphysics.com |
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#3
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Craig Markwardt wrote in message ...
What I suspect: the data is already a cumulative sum of residuals, presented as a function of accumulated light time. You - all NASA related parties - use this data to present it as a calendar day related data. It is simply not true, but you get the verification of your bigbangology. Which is the object of the exercise. This conclusion is unsubstantiated. None of the effects of earth motion, earth rotation, precession, nutation or polar motion are cumulative in any fashion, and neither is the anomalous Pioneer acceleration. The "calendar day" is quite simply the date of observation, no "accumulation" was performed or required. However, the Doppler data is 'averaged' - which I suspect is the accumulation, adding the residuals and adding the light times, signal travel times to match the assigned timetags. This conclusion was substantiated by the response to my very first question, related to the Pioneer 10 anomalous Doppler observations. PLease check it: if you take the 'calendar time' for the 'signal travel time' you get the magnitude just perfect for the Hubble effect. Also, since the record is beat frequency - and the insinuation of sign convention - the (*increase*) of frequency means *decrease* of really observed frequency - as it been reported in the early days. I am not insinuating any sign. I am declaring explicitly that the received frequency was slightly higher than expected. A putative sign error would have been hideously obvious, since all the other Doppler terms are very strongly imprinted in the signal. Therefore your claims are unsubstantiated, and your conclusions are irrelevant. CM But again: how to explain than the proposed test, made by the authors?! Is there a clearly defined 1. we sent this frequency, 2. we should get this frequency and 3. we got as much higher then expected frequency - unexplained but at least clear picture as you are trying to suggest? From here it looks differently: the processing of large amounts of signal travel time related Doppler data resulted in a drift of returned signal's frequency toward the longer wavelengths (frequency deficit) showing the Hubble redshift, equal to the distance of the signal travel. The presentation of these data files is causing the different interpretations. Again, I agree with the authors, for a clear picture repeated tests are necessary with clear records of sent frequency, clearly and precisely measured distance and clearly recorded returned frequencies. As I see, even you avoid a clear factual declaration about the records. In light of the early reports, your standing is too risky: you may be wrong. Cheers! Aladar http://stolmarphysics.com |
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Craig Markwardt wrote in message ...
[...] The "calendar day" is quite simply the date of observation, no "accumulation" was performed or required. [...] I am not insinuating any sign. I am declaring explicitly that the received frequency was slightly higher than expected. A putative sign error would have been hideously obvious, since all the other Doppler terms are very strongly imprinted in the signal. Therefore your claims are unsubstantiated, and your conclusions are irrelevant. CM (I hate to do it again, but in fact I'm leaving for two weeks.) Are you really saying that the error in JPL location determination - as a result of cummulative error in the velocity determination - is in order of light seconds?! In that case the claims that we know anything about gravity is substantiated, and great many conclusions are irrelevant - on the establishment side... Cheers! Aladar http://stolmarphysics.com |
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#6
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Aladar wrote:
Are you really saying that the error in JPL location determination - as a result of cummulative error in the velocity determination - is in order of light seconds?! In that case the claims that we know anything about gravity is substantiated, and great many conclusions are irrelevant - on the establishment side... Since you are going away for two weeks, take a copy of http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0208046 with you and study it at length. -Sam |
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