Re: Pioneer anomaly



On 19 ene, 13:08, "Thomas Heger" <hba...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi NG

don't know, if there new results on the pioneer anomaly.

I have a simple idea about that and would like to write it.

Its based on a model of spacetime with some simple assumptions. Every objekt
is treated as in rest to its local patch of space. Space is perpendicular to
proper time and this is modelled as a motion.

Gravity in this picture is related to space and the celestial bodies are not
treated further. Spacetime in this modell is moving away from an event
called big bang. Since bodies are at rest in their space, they move in
respect to the space of an other object. This is modelled as a bending of
the trajectory. A patch of spacetime can 'move' in an other direction. The
direction is determined by some influence that can be treated as
superposition of history of that patch of spacetime. In all other aspekts it
'flys' independent. A patch is bound to the neighborhood by the partially
same history, but to nothing else.

History is influencing the present by some unknown mechanics, but it is
assumened to be the history that has influence.

In case of curved spacetime a moving body moving perpendicular to a
gravitational field is moving in a patch of spacetime, that is influenced in
the past stronger, than where it is now, since it moved to an area now,
where curvature is less. If you draw a very narrow triangle and let a body
move perpendicular to it, you see that the influences on that patch of local
space are not the same for a path left-right-left to a path
right-left-right.

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/forces/isq.html#isqe

Here you see a picture of the inverse square law. Imagin those 'cones'
attached to any point in history and influencing somehow the present. So
they would point to such a patch of present and overlay to a new direction
of spacetime. They point in axis with proper time. If there is an angle
between those worldlines, there is more influence in the cone of the events
more nearer to the sun. This could result in a very tiny accelaration.

Thomas Heger

The Pioneer Anomaly is the clamorous evidence that General Relativity
is
badly wrong. New physics always means GR is wrong, that threatens
relativists.
They all have the least interest in serious searching about that
issue.
That's sad but true. Their unsuccessful attempts to explain the
Pioneer
Anomaly, in good agreement with GR, are grotesque.

.



Relevant Pages

  • Pioneer anomaly
    ... Its based on a model of spacetime with some simple assumptions. ... A patch of spacetime can 'move' in an other direction. ... superposition of history of that patch of spacetime. ... assumened to be the history that has influence. ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: Pioneer anomaly
    ... A patch of spacetime can 'move' in an other direction. ... assumened to be the history that has influence. ... and the velocity profile is found from the doppler effect. ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: Pioneer anomaly
    ... A patch of spacetime can 'move' in an other direction. ... assumened to be the history that has influence. ... Pioneer 10/11 probes did. ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: Pioneer anomaly
    ... A patch of spacetime can 'move' in an other direction. ... assumened to be the history that has influence. ... Pioneer anomaly than the folks who have been investigating it for ...
    (sci.physics.relativity)
  • Re: New Tune - "Self Made Man"
    ... The spoken intro reminds me a little of Alice Cooper (say ... and maybe a little King's X influence? ... Yeah, I hear ya. ... my normal 'tube stack' patch and blend them left and right. ...
    (alt.guitar)