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"Charles Francis" wrote in message ...
[ snip ] I think Riess only has three data points above z=1.4 . Actually the number of points above z=1 is probably not enough for statistical significance, given that there is quite a scatter below z=1. There seems to be some issue with SN1997ff anyway, because correction for gravitational lensing may not be accurate (see abstract below - any comment, Philip? this is your field isn't it). How does it affect the fit if you take out the two or three highest redshifts, which may be unbalancing the result? Not much I don't think. The fit of other 154 points shouldn't be affected much by removing just three. The teleconnection Omega=1 relation looks too close to call to the Astier fit, for z up to about 1. He has a large scatter of points, reinforcing the idea that there are not enough points about z=1.4 to be valid. It looks to me like the teleconnection probably gives the better fit. Any chance of testing that data? Yes! I entered Astier's data into my Matlab program this morning, and results are posted on my website. When I fit Riess's equations 11 and 12 to Astier's data (the red line in the plot), the optimum Omega_m I got was 0.25 at H0 = 71. Chi-square was 1259.6. When I fit Riess's equations with your modification (the blue line), the optimum Omega_m was 1.09 at H0 = 69.6, with a chi-square value of 1265.7. -- Bob Day |
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Bob Day writes
When I fit Riess's equations with your modification (the blue line), the optimum Omega_m was 1.09 at H0 = 69.6, with a chi-square value of 1265.7. So is there now some evidence that an appropriately formulated teleconnection takes existing data and gets: 1) A close to critical universe with *no need* for a) unidentified dark matter b) dark energy (no accelerating expansion). 2) A much older universe removing the any hint of an 'age problem'. 3) A quantitative consistent theoretical model that requires a modification to "galactic expansion doppler" that shows a doppler measurement has an extra term even when the bodies are following a *newtonian* path. This removes the apparant anomalies in: a) Observed galactic rotation curves. b) Anomalous pioneer 'acceleration'. To me this seems to be quite enough to justify someone spending a week checking over charles' proposals seriously. -- Oz This post is worth absolutely nothing and is probably fallacious. Use functions]. BTOPENWORLD address has ceased. DEMON address has ceased. |
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