![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: gravity, issues, lesage, stability |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#11
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Sat, 29 May 2004 "greywolf42" wrote:
in the books I've seen. The 'aberration angle' is given as simply 'v/c'. Which books are those? The aberration angle for a theory of the kind you are talking about is obviously (m/M)*(v/v_g). Even with this factor, the aberration is still far too great to be compatible with the observed stability of Jupiter's orbit (unless v_g is many orders of magnitude greater than the speed of light, in which case the planet is vaporized). Reference, please. Halliday and Resnik, "Physics", 1978. The aberration effect can be offset by ultra-mundane drag, but only at one orbital radius, sqrt(m/(k v_g), for a given mass m. This conflicts with observation. How? It implies that long-term stability of orbiting two-body systems is impossible except with m/r^2 equal to a universal constant, whereas among the billions of binary star systems in the galaxy (about half of all stars are binaries) we find systems with a wide range of values of m/r^2. These observations cover thousands of light years (both distance and time), and show no trends that would indicate the orbits are unstable to the degree that would be implied by a Lesagean model. |
| Ads |
|
#12
|
|||
|
|||
|
Rod Lassiter wrote in message
... On Sat, 29 May 2004 "greywolf42" wrote: in the books I've seen. The 'aberration angle' is given as simply 'v/c'. Which books are those? The aberration angle for a theory of the kind you are talking about is obviously (m/M)*(v/v_g). Even with this factor, the aberration is still far too great to be compatible with the observed stability of Jupiter's orbit (unless v_g is many orders of magnitude greater than the speed of light, in which case the planet is vaporized). Reference, please. Halliday and Resnik, "Physics", 1978. Page number or section number for the derivation? I'm sure I could find it, but I'm trying to encourage proper citing in the NG. (I'm assuming the derivation exists in H&R?) The aberration effect can be offset by ultra-mundane drag, but only at one orbital radius, sqrt(m/(k v_g), for a given mass m. This conflicts with observation. How? It implies that long-term stability of orbiting two-body systems is impossible except with m/r^2 equal to a universal constant, whereas among the billions of binary star systems in the galaxy (about half of all stars are binaries) we find systems with a wide range of values of m/r^2. These observations cover thousands of light years (both distance and time), and show no trends that would indicate the orbits are unstable to the degree that would be implied by a Lesagean model. You are claiming worlds beyond your simple little balance point equation. All you can safely conclude is that if you look only at tangential aberration force and tangential drag force for a perfectly circular orbit, at rest in a perfectly uniform aether, there is only one balance point. Note the number of assumptions you have built in (probably without being aware of them). I'm doing this one step at a time. You see, Steve has been trumpeting that there are *NO* possible balance points in LeSagian gravity for years. He either asserts planets will spiral in (due to drag -- like his latest effort), or asserts that planets will spiral out due to aberration. It depends on what argument he tries to avoid. At the moment, I'm attempting to point out that when one focuses on only one issue in a complex subject (and orbital dynamics is complex and not always intuitive), one cannot make general claims about the stability of the system. -- greywolf42 ubi dubium ibi libertas {remove planet for return e-mail} |
|
#13
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
|
#14
|
|||
|
|||
|
greywolf42 wrote in message
... Rod Lassiter wrote in message ... On Sat, 29 May 2004 "greywolf42" wrote: in the books I've seen. The 'aberration angle' is given as simply 'v/c'. Which books are those? The aberration angle for a theory of the kind you are talking about is obviously (m/M)*(v/v_g). Even with this factor, the aberration is still far too great to be compatible with the observed stability of Jupiter's orbit (unless v_g is many orders of magnitude greater than the speed of light, in which case the planet is vaporized). Reference, please. Halliday and Resnik, "Physics", 1978. Page number or section number for the derivation? I'm sure I could find it, but I'm trying to encourage proper citing in the NG. (I'm assuming the derivation exists in H&R?) Couldn't find it in the 1966 version (which is the only one UC Davis has). There *was* something on the Earth's self-gravitation. But nothing on aberration. Could you kindly provide the section number, or scan the section for me? Or at least verify that the derivation (not just the result) is contained in the book? The aberration effect can be offset by ultra-mundane drag, but only at one orbital radius, sqrt(m/(k v_g), for a given mass m. This conflicts with observation. How? It implies that long-term stability of orbiting two-body systems is impossible except with m/r^2 equal to a universal constant, whereas among the billions of binary star systems in the galaxy (about half of all stars are binaries) we find systems with a wide range of values of m/r^2. These observations cover thousands of light years (both distance and time), and show no trends that would indicate the orbits are unstable to the degree that would be implied by a Lesagean model. You are claiming worlds beyond your simple little balance point equation. All you can safely conclude is that if you look only at tangential aberration force and tangential drag force for a perfectly circular orbit, at rest in a perfectly uniform aether, there is only one balance point. Note the number of assumptions you have built in (probably without being aware of them). I'm doing this one step at a time. You see, Steve has been trumpeting that there are *NO* possible balance points in LeSagian gravity for years. He either asserts planets will spiral in (due to drag -- like his latest effort), or asserts that planets will spiral out due to aberration. It depends on what argument he tries to avoid. At the moment, I'm attempting to point out that when one focuses on only one issue in a complex subject (and orbital dynamics is complex and not always intuitive), one cannot make general claims about the stability of the system. -- greywolf42 ubi dubium ibi libertas {remove planet for return e-mail} |
|
#15
|
|||
|
|||
|
|
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| LeSage and gravity | stopgoblinlittleminds@yahoo.com | Physics - General Discussion | 14 | June 19th 05 02:23 PM |
| Stability Issues in LeSage Gravity #1 | greywolf42 | Physics - General Discussion | 14 | June 5th 04 06:58 PM |
| Stability Issues in LeSage Gravity #1 | greywolf42 | Physics - General Discussion | 17 | May 23rd 04 10:50 PM |
| Stability Issues in LeSage Gravity #1 | greywolf42 | The Theory of Relativity | 17 | May 23rd 04 10:50 PM |