Re: This is What Einstein Actually Did.



Henri Wilson wrote:
On 25 Jul 2006 17:18:08 -0700, "Jerry" <Cephalobus_alienus@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Sorcerer wrote:
There is NO secondary, it would break up, it would be within the Roche
limit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roche_Limit

Excuse me? Two stellar spectra are visible, and the orbits
and mass characteristics of the components are readily
determined.

The "secondary" is a jovian planet named "Androcles"
(although I'd be loath to call Jupiter a "secondary" of our sun)
and the orbit is almost face-on, 85 degrees from the line of sight.
There is a similar planet orbiting d-Ceph named "Cassandra".
I chose that name from mythology, Cassandra spoke truth but was
not believed. The planet orbiting WR20 (southern hemisphere)
is named "Wilson's Folly", although Henri Wilson prefers to call
it "Wilson2". He's a shithead who thinks all worbits are seen edge-on
and his star is 0.3 LY away, so he ignores the angle of inclination
to the celestial plane. Nor does he understand Kepler's equation.
http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Wilson/worbit.JPG
Orbits are not worbits. Worbits have points like the ace of spades.

You see Jerry, he is so envious over the fact that my program is far superior
to his that he has to resort to insults.

He is actually right about Mercury's precession and Algol's possession of the
orbiting WCH "Androcles". The second observed spectrum is the reflection of
light from the main star from 'Androcles'.

From the observed radial velocities, it can be computed that your
so-called planet "Androcles" is 22% as massive as Algol A, and 0.81
times as massive as our Sun. That's unreasonably large for a planet.

Jerry

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