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![]() "N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc)" N: dlzc1 D:cox wrote in message news:jKmkg.33862$AB3.11690@fed1read02... Dear George: "George" wrote in message m... "N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc)" N: dlzc1 D:cox wrote in message news:64dkg.33850$AB3.658@fed1read02... Dear ca314159: "ca314159" wrote in message ... Joe Jakarta wrote: ... Where's *your* money, ladies and gentlemen? 1. Lack of funding. 2. Johnsen-Rahbek effect on the solar panels. Did these spacecraft (Pioner 10 and 11) even have solar panels? They were built for "outer system" work, and solar panels would be useless. I thought they had radioactive isotope power generators. They did. But a quick glimpse didn't show anything that said they didn't also have solar panels. But why they'd have something onboard that would fail by Jupiter doesn't make sense to me. David A. Smith None of the available images and diagrams show solar panels on these craft. Like this one, for instance: http://quest.nasa.gov/sso/cool/pione...r/slide2lg.gif George |
#22
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![]() N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc) wrote: Dear Rising-Star8471: "Rising-Star8471" wrote in message ps.com... ... Im still sold on dust. A dust ring around the edge of the solar system would have been undetectable by the voyager series. PLUS it would account for both probes slowing down...... But not with the same rate. *If* the two probes speeds are different by 10%, and the density of dust is the same along the two paths, and the dust velocity radially outwards is zero, then the acceleration due to the impulse difference should be along the lines of 19%. But it is not. ... But we can say what its not....... Its NOT a planet Its NOT a star Its NOT a moon Its not ANY ONE object that can be in solar orbit (.) It CANNOT be an object in which the solar system is bound. Yes, it could be an orbitting halo of Dark Matter. But that means that every planet starting with/after Jupiter would be funkey. If it is gravity, then the probe should have been deflected off course, I have not seen any data indicating this. An anomalous sunward acceleration (ASA) *is* like gravity, and the ASA *is* indicated by the data. Not to mention that any one of the aformentioned possiblites would have only effected ONE of the probes (Although I think of the trojen asteriods trapped by Jupiter and wonder, but then again these objects are in orbit and not traveling in a straight line) What does that leave us that naturally occurs in space? Dust Gas Solar Wind (or similarly classified phenominon) cosmic rays? A sunward-facing solar sail (aka. radio dish) with a hot power-plant behind it providing net-sunward thrust. Present in all craft. Intensity of the Solar output falls off by 1/r^2 (outward on the sail), and the radioactive source falls off 1/(e^kt) (reduces inward on the sail). Im going to stick with dust ........ Contraindicated. Even if the dust were slightly outbound, the differential impulse would be greater (and more would be required to provide the acceleration detected). And if the dust were inbound, the acceleration is then wrong and abother cause needs to be sought. Does there have to be -one- explanation? Maybe the difficulty in determining the cause is that there are -multiple- causes. Jerry |
#23
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![]() "Richard Saam" wrote in message ... Summary Motion data: Pioneer 10 about 28,000 mph 1,250,000 cm/sec (sun reference) Pioneer 11 about 26,000 mph 1,160,000 cm/sec (sun reference) with deceleration for both at (8.74 ± 1.33) x 10^(-8) cm/sec2 (5.99 ± 0.01) x 10^(-9) Hz/s and the pioneer spacecraft rotational spin rates Pioneer 10 about 4 rpm (2,581 cm/sec tip speed) Pioneer 11 about 7 rpm (4,517 cm/sec tip speed) with deceleration for both at .0067 rpm/year Moment of inertia = 5.88E9 g cm^2 Mass = 241,000 gram Area = 58,965 cm2 Logically It can be concluded that deceleration is independent of observation coordinate Ok so I've no idea what I'm talking about really but.... If spacetime were quantized would energy be required to move objects between each quantum "position"? Could that be the cause... a bit like driving over a cobbled road? Would that explain why the effect is independant of the coordinate system? Would it be hard to calculate the scale of the effect on that basis? Can it be ruled out because of the effect it would have on some other branch of physics if it existed? |
#24
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![]() "Joe Jakarta" wrote in message oups.com... http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?art...4583414B7F0000 "One of the most intriguing mysteries in physics is the "Pioneer anomaly," the slowing down of two spacecraft by an unknown force. NASA launched Pioneer 10 and 11 in 1972 and 1973, respectively, and the craft returned stunning images of Jupiter and Saturn. But as both spacecraft continued their voyages at speeds of roughly 27,000 miles per hour, astronomer John Anderson of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., noticed anomalies in telemetry data dating from as far back as 1980. With continued analysis, researchers determined that the spacecraft had been slowing down at a constant rate: each year they fell 8,000 miles short of their calculated positions. "The most obvious theory was that something on the spacecraft themselves created a braking force--leaking gas or heat radiation, perhaps. Where's *your* money, ladies and gentlemen? My money is still on something in the spacecraft. Martin Hogbin |
#25
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If the sun is some kind of force field it will explain the sunward
acceleration. |
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Dear Jerry:
"Jerry" wrote in message ps.com... N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc) wrote: Dear Rising-Star8471: .... Im going to stick with dust ........ Contraindicated. Even if the dust were slightly outbound, the differential impulse would be greater (and more would be required to provide the acceleration detected). And if the dust were inbound, the acceleration is then wrong and abother cause needs to be sought. Does there have to be -one- explanation? Maybe the difficulty in determining the cause is that there are -multiple- causes. As in all else, there are multiple causes. So placing all faith in "dust", or in "solar sail", is a waste of time. Good point. David A. Smith |
#27
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Dear CWatters:
"CWatters" wrote in message ... .... If spacetime were quantized would energy be required to move objects between each quantum "position"? Could that be the cause... a bit like driving over a cobbled road? Would that explain why the effect is independant of the coordinate system? Why does it only affect these satellites? The planets that travel cross streets to these "cobblestone roads" don't have any problems. Any "quantized space" model will have to agree with all experimental data, and that includes other objects at similar distances NOT showing an anomalous sunward acceleration. David A. Smith |
#28
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Dear George:
"George" wrote in message m... "N:dlzc D:aol T:com (dlzc)" N: dlzc1 D:cox wrote in message news:jKmkg.33862$AB3.11690@fed1read02... .... I thought they had radioactive isotope power generators. They did. But a quick glimpse didn't show anything that said they didn't also have solar panels. But why they'd have something onboard that would fail by Jupiter doesn't make sense to me. None of the available images and diagrams show solar panels on these craft. Like this one, for instance: http://quest.nasa.gov/sso/cool/pione...r/slide2lg.gif Thanks! Of course, this shoots my "solar sail" hypothesis in the foot, since the thermopile is not shadowed by the radio dish pointed at the Sun... David A. Smith |
#29
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![]() "Joe Jakarta" wrote in message oups.com... http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?art...A54583414B7F00 00 "One of the most intriguing mysteries in physics is the "Pioneer anomaly," the slowing down of two spacecraft by an unknown force. NASA launched Pioneer 10 and 11 in 1972 and 1973, respectively, and the craft returned stunning images of Jupiter and Saturn. But as both spacecraft continued their voyages at speeds of roughly 27,000 miles per hour, astronomer John Anderson of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., noticed anomalies in telemetry data dating from as far back as 1980. With continued analysis, researchers determined that the spacecraft had been slowing down at a constant rate: each year they fell 8,000 miles short of their calculated positions. The strange behavior sparked several theories, but the lack of data made culling the ideas difficult. Now a proposal to analyze telemetry from the early years could literally point toward the correct explanation. "The most obvious theory was that something on the spacecraft themselves created a braking force--leaking gas or heat radiation, perhaps. Over the years, however, researchers increasingly viewed this hypothesis as less likely, and some physicists began to explore possible flaws in Newton's laws and relativity. Others posited that dark matter was the culprit: it might exert a gravitational or drag force. A third theory embraces the idea that a minute acceleration exists in the velocity of light, which might result in the appearance that the probes are slowing down: if light travels faster, telemetry signals arrive faster, and the craft seem to be closer. "Anderson and theorist Michael M. Nieto of Los Alamos National Laboratory have proposed a way to filter the ideas, noting the interesting fact that the direction of the anomalous force would be different for each theory. If the force points toward the sun, then it should be a gravitational effect. If it points toward Earth, it should be an anomaly relating to the velocity of light. If it points in the direction of motion, it should be a drag force or a modification of inertia. And finally, if it points along the spin axis of the probes, it should indicate a force generated by the craft. ..." (Alexander Hellemans, "A Force to Reckon With: What applied the brakes on Pioneer 10 and 11? ", Scientific American, 10 October 1995) Where's *your* money, ladies and gentlemen? The paths of Pioneer 10 and 11 are affected by the concentrations of dark matter within the sun and the planets. Since the sun conntains the greatest concentration of dark matter that's why the probes are found to be accelerating toward to the sun. The following link describes this effect in details (pages 14 and 15): http://www.geocities.com/kn_seto/2005Unification.pdf Ken Seto |
#30
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![]() "Rising-Star8471" wrote in message oups.com... .... Then I would have to go with dust. It appears that they are both traveling the plane of the eclipic, where as the voyagers are both far above and far below the ecliptic. Its possible that the solar system still has dust rings beyond the orbit of Neptune that are leftovers from planetry development. We woulnt neccisarly notice from here because this dust would have always there to us, We dont have a "dust free: enviroment to compare the observations to. This would also explain why it happened to both probes, and the following body of mass theroy. The probe is still plowing through the dust. When its speed stablizes, it will have gone through the other side. The effect of dust as a drag on the craft has been considered and is too small. The gravitation effect of the total mass of the dust in the Kuiper Belt region is shown in Figure 15. http://www.arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0104064 They also consider the effect of dust on the RTG fins changing the emission characteristics to create an imbalance in emissivity preferentially radiating heat away from the craft and a hypothetical interaction of the dust with the radio signal causing a frequency change without affecting the motion of the craft. The anomaly remains unexplained. George |
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