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On 29 Mar 2007 10:25:26 -0700, "George Dishman"
wrote: On 28 Mar, 01:50, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: ... Whether or not cepheids are really huff-puff stars doesn't matter. We say their brightness variations are due to c+v effects caused by their surfaces moving in and out. A brightess curve produced that way is likely to be similar to that for a star in elliptical orbit. What ????? For years you have been saying that Cepheids were plain constant-luminosity stars and the variation was due to c+v effects because they are in binary systems that have not been recognised as such. No I changed that opinion some time ago George. I accepted that the presence of harmonics in the brightness curves was pretty hard to explain on purely 'orbit' grounds. So it is quite likely that two factors are contributing to the brightness curves of these stars. Their orbit motion and the huff-puffing of their surfaces. If you are now switching to say they are single stars, why on Earth would your software be modelling binary systems and restricting the solutions to Keplerian orbits when the motion of the surface is due to internal pressure? I think it is my turn to say you are getting very confused Henry. George It is a fact that most 'cepheids' appear to have a companion...which means they are in some kind of orbit. I reckon the movement of their surfaces would feature similar radial velocities to those of an orbit. It is distinctly possible that the huffing is linked to the orbit period. It is also possible that the stars are in tidal lock and distorted into some kind of dumbell shape, leading to a brightness variation as they orbit....but that wouldn't account for the short periods of many of them. "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him." --Jonathan Swift. |
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On 29 Mar 2007 00:09:21 -0700, "George Dishman"
wrote: On 29 Mar, 01:32, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On 28 Mar 2007 06:27:41 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: On 28 Mar, 11:40, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On 28 Mar 2007 02:16:59 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: On 28 Mar, 08:10, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: The diagram would be like this: g h --- O + B The pulsar sends one pulse from g and the next from h, it is orbiting round the barycentre B and the observer is at O. Obviously there is a v*cos(theta) term for other parts of the orbit, it is the distance change in the direction of the line of sight that matters. I have incorporated that by adding an Rsin(x) term to the star distance. It is generally negligible. It will certainly be small but it is not negligible, it will produce a 45 degree phase shift when the ADoppler is about 93 parts per million too and in fact we know that the VDoppler is probably larger than the ADoppler _except_that_ the phase can be changed by the effect you describe at the top of the post regarding an elliptical orbit looking circular. I think I had it right before. The distance for 45 deg phase difference is about 0.0007 LY. It is independent of velocity. OK, that is the sort of value I would expect. Now the general gist of my argument is this: you get a 45 degree phase shift at 0.0007 LY so you would expect to get of the order of 5 degrees at a 1/10th of that distance where the ADoppler only adds a small fraction to the VDoppler. You made the point that an elliptical orbit could look circular provided the periastron was on the line of sight because the distortion of the sine wave from the variable speed is cancelled by the distortion caused by the c+v effect. A slight change in your yaw factor could then change the relative phase of those factors to give a net phase change of a few degrees. That could cancel the phase shift due to ADoppler and again make the orbit look circular. The distortion of the brightness curve for circular orbits looks quite symmetrical. I tried varying the yaw angle very slightly but it skewed the curve away from a sine wave. I think the major axis has to be aligned witrh teh LOS. However, we don;t know how acccurate the published curves are....so you are probably right. The bottom line then is that knowing we see what looks like a circular orbit (or at least very low eccentricity) there is a relationship between the extinction distance, the true eccentricity and the yaw. Well I can telll you one thing. The extinction distance is directly proportional to period. The 0.0007 value is for a period of 0.0042 years. It becomes 0.007 for 0.042 years, 0.07 for 0.042 years..etc. ....always independent of peripheral velocity. How can you explain THAT? From your other reply: That is what I was alluding to a couple of weeks ago. For small values you can probably get a match by eye but the equation for an ellipse and those for Kepler's Laws are quite different from the effect of ballistic theory. It would be a curious though unimportant coincidence if they exactly matched. Just as Ptolemy was able to get a good but imperfect match with combined circles, I think if you did the analytical investigation, you would find there was a small difference but perhaps third or fourth order. That is what would show up as the shape of a pattern in your residuals. I think it is quite likely that there is an exact match. It isn't unreasonable. Given the form of the equations, I disagree but if you do the calculation, you might prove me wrong. The c+v factor might effectively 'squash' the ellipse back into a circle. That seems plausible. For different eccentricitiers, the curve becomes a sinewave at diffferent distances (for he same maximum velocity) Possibly, but I think the ADoppler distortion continues to increase with distance and eventually causes multiple images while the Keplerian distortion will be asymptotic to some curve as the yaw approaches 90 degrees. The question is how much the cancellation degrades as higher order terms become more important. Your simulation is the easiest way to investigate that. Yes..and I agree there has to be a degree of extinction...even though the distance anomaly can now be explained by the fact that the calculated velocity curves might be grossly exaggerated. The end result should be an upper limit on the speed equalisation distance based on the uncertainty in the orbital phase and the eccentricity. I will upload my program to the website George so you can fiddle with it. It is by no measns complete but is OK for circular orbits. Click the red button after selecting eccentricity then click either the yellow one (for my original method) or 'george' for your quick method. George has the VDoppler correction included... Increase 'output size' to see the curve at short distances. If you hold the mouse button down, a vertical line appears on the screen to compare phases. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/newvariables.exe George "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him." --Jonathan Swift. |
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![]() Henri Wilson wrote: The extinction distance is directly proportional to period. The 0.0007 value is for a period of 0.0042 years. It becomes 0.007 for 0.042 years, 0.07 for 0.42 years..etc. ...always independent of peripheral velocity. How can you explain THAT? As I said 19 and 20 March, the light speed unification distance is inversely proportional to the rate of pulse bunching. The more rapidly the pulses bunch, the shorter the unification distance. What you have found is the obvious fact that the rate of pulse bunching is inversely proportional to the period. All else being equal, the shorter the period, the more rapidly the pulses bunch. So naturally, the shorter the period, the shorter the unification distance. Leonard |
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On 29 Mar 2007 17:24:58 -0700, "Leonard Kellogg" wrote:
Henri Wilson wrote: The extinction distance is directly proportional to period. The 0.0007 value is for a period of 0.0042 years. It becomes 0.007 for 0.042 years, 0.07 for 0.42 years..etc. ...always independent of peripheral velocity. How can you explain THAT? As I said 19 and 20 March, the light speed unification distance is inversely proportional to the rate of pulse bunching. The more rapidly the pulses bunch, the shorter the unification distance. What you have found is the obvious fact that the rate of pulse bunching is inversely proportional to the period. All else being equal, the shorter the period, the more rapidly the pulses bunch. So naturally, the shorter the period, the shorter the unification distance. That's an interesting idea....I'll think about it........but unification - or classical extinction - should depend only on the properties of the space through which the light travels...should it not? Obviously however the speed of a pulse cannot be unified with that of another that hasn't even been emitted. I'm somewhat mystified by this. I don't think unification takes place as rapidly as I originally believed. I no longer need it to explain why my distances had to always be much shorter than the Hipparcos ones. Leonard "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him." --Jonathan Swift. |
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On 30 Mar, 07:07, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote:
On 29 Mar 2007 17:24:58 -0700, "Leonard Kellogg" wrote: Henri Wilson wrote: The extinction distance is directly proportional to period. The 0.0007 value is for a period of 0.0042 years. It becomes 0.007 for 0.042 years, 0.07 for 0.42 years..etc. ...always independent of peripheral velocity. How can you explain THAT? As I said 19 and 20 March, the light speed unification distance is inversely proportional to the rate of pulse bunching. The more rapidly the pulses bunch, the shorter the unification distance. What you have found is the obvious fact that the rate of pulse bunching is inversely proportional to the period. All else being equal, the shorter the period, the more rapidly the pulses bunch. So naturally, the shorter the period, the shorter the unification distance. That's an interesting idea....I'll think about it...... I don't think you quite followed what Leonard was saying, or at least what i think he was saying. This goes back to the little applet I wrote for you a couple of weeks ago. Did you never wonder how I was able to do that ? ..but unification - or classical extinction - should depend only on the properties of the space through which the light travels...should it not? Yes it should. Obviously however the speed of a pulse cannot be unified with that of another that hasn't even been emitted. I'm somewhat mystified by this. You need to step back a little and look at the problem a different way. The VDoppler as you said produces a relatively small brightening effect so for high values we can assume ADoppler is dominant. The equation for ADoppler without speed equalisation is is 1/(c^2-da) where d is the distance from the source to the observer and a is the instantaneous acceleration towards the observer at the time of emission. The value c^2/a is then the "critical distance". Obviously that depends on the acceleration which in turn depends on the period. Note also though that the component of the acceleration towards the observer also depends on the pitch. What that means is that for a high brightness, the speed equalisation distance has to be an exact fraction of the "critical distance" which means the properties of the space the light passes through depend on the inclination of the orbit. Basically you have to invent this "speed equalistion" factor and set it to an orbit dependent value to avoid de Sitter's argument. You can set a low value but then you get no brightening and Doppler effects are no different to conventional values, but to get any of the effects you have been claiming over the years, you have to have the "properties of space" being entirely dependent on the source acceleration and the inclination of the orbit. Inclination is particularly telling. It means if we see a star with high variability, the speed equalisation distance must be very close to the critical distance, and that means another observer looking at the same star form an inclination a few degrees less would see multiple images. However there is nothing special about us so we should see some stars showing multiple images if this model was correct. As you know, we don't. The solution is that speed equalisation must happen over a relatively short distance and there aren't any significant brightening or ADoppler effects. I don't think unification takes place as rapidly as I originally believed. I no longer need it to explain why my distances had to always be much shorter than the Hipparcos ones. As you can see, the requirement is actually that it is a lot shorter than you thought. With a very rough estimate based on your figure of 0.0007 light years for 45 degrees and a phase uncertainty based on the time spread of 74ns on a PRF of 2.295ms, I get a speed equalistion distance of 54 light seconds. That should be typical of the "property of space" for all stars. George |
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![]() "Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message ... On 29 Mar 2007 00:09:21 -0700, "George Dishman" wrote: On 29 Mar, 01:32, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: I think I had it right before. The distance for 45 deg phase difference is about 0.0007 LY. It is independent of velocity. OK, that is the sort of value I would expect. Now the general gist of my argument is this: you get a 45 degree phase shift at 0.0007 LY so you would expect to get of the order of 5 degrees at a 1/10th of that distance where the ADoppler only adds a small fraction to the VDoppler. You made the point that an elliptical orbit could look circular provided the periastron was on the line of sight because the distortion of the sine wave from the variable speed is cancelled by the distortion caused by the c+v effect. A slight change in your yaw factor could then change the relative phase of those factors to give a net phase change of a few degrees. That could cancel the phase shift due to ADoppler and again make the orbit look circular. The distortion of the brightness curve for circular orbits looks quite symmetrical. I tried varying the yaw angle very slightly but it skewed the curve away from a sine wave. I think the major axis has to be aligned witrh teh LOS. However, we don;t know how acccurate the published curves are....so you are probably right. I've already replied but I didn't have time to explain where the numbers came from so here's a bit more detail. The residuals on the timing measurements are measured at 74ns compared with a pulse period of 2.295ms. They say somewhere that if they can reconfigure the receivers to make better use of multiple channels, they should be able to get that down to 10ns. If yaw distorts the shape rather than changing the phase, a crude estimate of the phase accuracy is 74ns in 2.295ms or about 3 parts per million, that is 0.011 degrees on the phase. The bottom line then is that knowing we see what looks like a circular orbit (or at least very low eccentricity) there is a relationship between the extinction distance, the true eccentricity and the yaw. Well I can telll you one thing. The extinction distance is directly proportional to period. The 0.0007 value is for a period of 0.0042 years. It becomes 0.007 for 0.042 years, 0.07 for 0.042 years..etc. ...always independent of peripheral velocity. How can you explain THAT? See my addition to Leonard's response, you require an _incredible_ coincidence between the inclination from which we are viewing the system and the properties of space along the line of sight. The end result should be an upper limit on the speed equalisation distance based on the uncertainty in the orbital phase and the eccentricity. I will upload my program to the website George so you can fiddle with it. It is by no measns complete but is OK for circular orbits. Click the red button after selecting eccentricity then click either the yellow one (for my original method) or 'george' for your quick method. George has the VDoppler correction included... Increase 'output size' to see the curve at short distances. If you hold the mouse button down, a vertical line appears on the screen to compare phases. http://www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/newvariables.exe I'll have a go over the weekend but it depends whether you can set numbers sufficiently low. If extinction is around one light minute as I suspect, the GUI is going to be inconvenient. George |
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On 30 Mar 2007 03:25:40 -0700, "George Dishman"
wrote: On 30 Mar, 07:07, HW@....(Henri Wilson) wrote: On 29 Mar 2007 17:24:58 -0700, "Leonard Kellogg" wrote: Henri Wilson wrote: The extinction distance is directly proportional to period. The 0.0007 value is for a period of 0.0042 years. It becomes 0.007 for 0.042 years, 0.07 for 0.42 years..etc. ...always independent of peripheral velocity. How can you explain THAT? As I said 19 and 20 March, the light speed unification distance is inversely proportional to the rate of pulse bunching. The more rapidly the pulses bunch, the shorter the unification distance. What you have found is the obvious fact that the rate of pulse bunching is inversely proportional to the period. All else being equal, the shorter the period, the more rapidly the pulses bunch. So naturally, the shorter the period, the shorter the unification distance. That's an interesting idea....I'll think about it...... I don't think you quite followed what Leonard was saying, or at least what i think he was saying. This goes back to the little applet I wrote for you a couple of weeks ago. Did you never wonder how I was able to do that ? ..but unification - or classical extinction - should depend only on the properties of the space through which the light travels...should it not? Yes it should. Obviously however the speed of a pulse cannot be unified with that of another that hasn't even been emitted. I'm somewhat mystified by this. You need to step back a little and look at the problem a different way. The VDoppler as you said produces a relatively small brightening effect so for high values we can assume ADoppler is dominant. The equation for ADoppler without speed equalisation is is 1/(c^2-da) where d is the distance from the source to the observer and a is the instantaneous acceleration towards the observer at the time of emission. I get c^2/(c^2-da) ....no worries... The value c^2/a is then the "critical distance". Obviously that depends on the acceleration which in turn depends on the period. Note also though that the component of the acceleration towards the observer also depends on the pitch. Hold a circle in front of you at any angle. (or an ellipse) Rotate you head until you find an axis in the plane of the circle that horizontal to the line between your eyes and is also perpendicular to the LOS. (one always exists) ALL the radial velocities and the accelerations around the orbit are then multiplied by the same factor, cos(pitch), where the pitch angle refers to the rotation around the above axis. What that means is that for a high brightness, the speed equalisation distance has to be an exact fraction of the "critical distance" which means the properties of the space the light passes through depend on the inclination of the orbit. That's OK. Cos(Pitch) is included in the velocity figure. Basically you have to invent this "speed equalistion" factor and set it to an orbit dependent value to avoid de Sitter's argument. You can set a low value but then you get no brightening and Doppler effects are no different to conventional values, but to get any of the effects you have been claiming over the years, you have to have the "properties of space" being entirely dependent on the source acceleration and the inclination of the orbit. George, frankly I cannot see where you got the idea that the ratio of VDoppler to ADoppler is in any way connected to the 'extinction distance'. The '45 degree' point is just a result of the minute difference in travel time due to the distace being modified by Rsin(xt). It is just a second order trigonometrical fact, quite negligible at normal star distances. Extinction is a property of the space through which the light has to travel. Inclination is particularly telling. It means if we see a star with high variability, the speed equalisation distance must be very close to the critical distance, and that means another observer looking at the same star form an inclination a few degrees less would see multiple images. However there is nothing special about us so we should see some stars showing multiple images if this model was correct. As you know, we don't. Sorry George, I think you have gone off the rails here. The solution is that speed equalisation must happen over a relatively short distance and there aren't any significant brightening or ADoppler effects. It doesn't have to happen over a very short distance at all. You are using the wrong values for your radial velocities. In reality they are much lower. I suspect that DeSitter based his calculations on similarly wrong radial velocities. I'll look it up. I don't think unification takes place as rapidly as I originally believed. I no longer need it to explain why my distances had to always be much shorter than the Hipparcos ones. As you can see, the requirement is actually that it is a lot shorter than you thought. With a very rough estimate based on your figure of 0.0007 light years for 45 degrees and a phase uncertainty based on the time spread of 74ns on a PRF of 2.295ms, I get a speed equalistion distance of 54 light seconds. That should be typical of the "property of space" for all stars. I don't know what you are talking about....and I don't think you do either George. Your pulsar's true radial velocity (orbit speed x cos(pitch)) is only a few metres per second. George Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's mother. |
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![]() Henri Wilson wrote: [grammatical errors corrected to improve readability] Hold a circle (or an ellipse) in front of you at any angle. Rotate your head until you find an axis in the plane of the circle that is horizontal to the line between your eyes, and is also perpendicular to the LOS. (one always exists) ALL the radial velocities and the accelerations around the orbit are then multiplied by the same factor, cos(pitch), where the pitch angle refers to the rotation around the above axis. Rotating one's head is irrelevant. The rotation that you describe (A "roll" of either the head or the projected ellipse) simply puts the long axis of the projected ellipse on the viewer's X axis. That is convienient but has no effect on the process of multiplying radial velocities and accelerations around the orbit by a factor of cos(pitch). You said this previously and I do not understand why George did not point out its irrelevancy at that time. Do I understand your terminology correctly as saying that the "pitch" of an orbit is zero when seen edge-on and 90 degrees when seen face-on? If so, your term "pitch" means the same as "inclination", which is the term everyone else uses in astronomy. Though it is often measured as angular deviation from face-on rather than from edge-on. That is how it is used in arXiv astro-ph/0507420.pdf (Table 1, "Orbital inclination, i") To double-check that we are talking about the same thing, see the illustration of "yaw", "pitch", and "roll" near the top of this page: http://mtp.jpl.nasa.gov/notes/pointing/pointing.html Leonard |
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![]() "Leonard Kellogg" wrote in message oups.com... http://mtp.jpl.nasa.gov/notes/pointing/pointing.html Leonard "Positive roll is right wing down, positive pitch is nose up, and positive yaw is east when heading north." Positive roll is right wing down = clockwise seen from tail. Positive pitch is nose up = clockwise seen from port wing. Positive yaw is east when heading north = clockwise seen from above. Mathematical angle is positive counterclockwise so you'll never be sure you are talking about the same thing. http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonde.../Androcube.gif This has all been explained to Wilson before, his standard response is "No", which he learns from Bielawski, Draper, Dishman and Poe, rendering him ineducable. Bielawski understands Poles are the butt of American jokes but does not know how far it is from A to A. "The answer was zero." - Androcles "No, the answer is not zero. Distance travelled by photon from A to A is not A-A. End of story." --Bielawski. End of story. |
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On 30 Mar 2007 23:12:44 -0700, "Leonard Kellogg" wrote:
Henri Wilson wrote: [grammatical errors corrected to improve readability] Hold a circle (or an ellipse) in front of you at any angle. Rotate your head until you find an axis in the plane of the circle that is horizontal to the line between your eyes, and is also perpendicular to the LOS. (one always exists) ALL the radial velocities and the accelerations around the orbit are then multiplied by the same factor, cos(pitch), where the pitch angle refers to the rotation around the above axis. Rotating one's head is irrelevant. The rotation that you describe (A "roll" of either the head or the projected ellipse) simply puts the long axis of the projected ellipse on the viewer's X axis. That is convienient but has no effect on the process of multiplying radial velocities and accelerations around the orbit by a factor of cos(pitch). You said this previously and I do not understand why George did not point out its irrelevancy at that time. Do I understand your terminology correctly as saying that the "pitch" of an orbit is zero when seen edge-on and 90 degrees when seen face-on? Yes...but the rotation is about an axis in the edge-on position....that axis lying perpendicular to the LOS and in the plane of the orbit. It is ALWAYS POSSIBLE TO FIND SUCH AN AXIS, no matter what the orbit configuration wrt Earth. .. If so, your term "pitch" means the same as "inclination", which is the term everyone else uses in astronomy. Though it is often measured as angular deviation from face-on rather than from edge-on. That is how it is used in arXiv astro-ph/0507420.pdf (Table 1, "Orbital inclination, i") To double-check that we are talking about the same thing, see the illustration of "yaw", "pitch", and "roll" near the top of this page: http://mtp.jpl.nasa.gov/notes/pointing/pointing.html Leonard I have tried to explain before that I have redefined pitch and yaw to make the programming of this stuff possible. My method is 100% correct and effective. For the purpose of brightness variation and measurement, one angle can be eliminated by simply 'rotating the horizontal', ie., one's head. Every orbit, eliptical or circular can be described in this way. ...an edge on orbit multiplied by cos(pitch)...or 'inclination' as you call it. To verify what I am saying, I suggest you make a paper cutout of an ellipse, stick it at some odd angle onto the end of a rod and hold it up in front of you. If you rotate the rod (representing the LOS) you will see that at one particular angle there will be an axis in the orbit plane that lies perpendicular to the LOS and parallel to the line between your eyes (the new horizontal). In that position, the orbit can be rotated around THAT AXIS through an angle (my 'pitch') into an edge on position. I define YAW as the angle between the major axis of the ellipse and the LOS when the orbit is in that edge on position. My 'zero yaw angle' is also defined differently ...for programming reasons. Thus, both acceleration and velocity can be simply multiplied by cos(pitch) to reduce their component in the direction of the observer. The effect is to simply reduce the height of my predicted brightness curves but not their **shapes**, which are determined solely by eccentricity and yaw angle. Note: It is not possible to resolve the pitch angle from a point source of light and I know of no method that can determine the pitch component involved in a measured velocity. So my radial velocity figures automatically represent (orbital velocity x cos(pitch). Einstein's Relativity - the greatest HOAX since jesus christ's mother. |
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