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- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU!CSD-NewsHost!jmc
- From: jmc@SAIL.Stanford.EDU (John McCarthy)
- Subject: Re: Averting doom
- In-Reply-To: billn@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com's message of Sun, 27 Dec 1992 07:00:33 GMT
- Message-ID: <JMC.92Dec26233200@SAIL.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU
- Reply-To: jmc@cs.Stanford.EDU
- Organization: Computer Science Department, Stanford University
- References: <1992Dec26.153304.8294@stortek.com> <1992Dec27.070033.18932@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com>
- Date: 26 Dec 92 23:32:00
- Lines: 19
-
- Bill Nelson says:
-
-
- Also, to move the Earth into a higher orbit, you would not
- speed the Earth up - you would slow it down. The Earth
- orbits the sun about 3 miles/second faster than Mars does.
-
- This isn't correct. To move the earth out you speed it up. This
- makes its orbit a longer ellipse with the perihelion at the point
- where you sped up the earth. At the aphelion of this orbit the
- earth will indeed be moving more slowly than it was originally.
- In fact if the aphelion is at the distance from the sun of Mars,
- it will be moving more slowly than Mars. Now another speed-up
- applied at the aphelion can circularize the orbit again.
- --
- John McCarthy, Computer Science Department, Stanford, CA 94305
- *
- He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
-
-