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- Xref: sparky talk.origins:15937 sci.astro:13459 sci.physics:21812
- Newsgroups: talk.origins,sci.astro,sci.physics
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!ames!agate!linus!linus.mitre.org!mwunix!m23364
- From: m23364@mwunix (James Meritt)
- Subject: Cosmos without Gravitation
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.133106.22923@linus.mitre.org>
- Followup-To: talk.origins
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mwunix.mitre.org
- Organization: MITRE Corporation, McLean VA
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 13:31:06 GMT
- Lines: 361
-
- An interesting paper...
-
- In _Cosmos_Without_Gravitation_, Immanuel Velikovsky writes:
- >
- >Phenomena not in accordance with the Theory of Gravitation:
-
- I would say, not in accordance with his understanding...
-
- >1. The ingredients of air - oxygen, nitrogen, argon and other gasses - though
- >not in a compound but in a mixture, are found in equal proportions at various
- >levels of the atmosphere despite great differences in specific weights.
-
- A nicely mixed meda, for sure...
-
- >2. Ozone, though heavier than oxygen, is absent in the lower layers of the
- >atmosphere, is present in the upper layers, and is not subject to the "mixing
- >effect of the wind."
-
- There is no suprise at finding an unstable substance near its source and that it
- be less common the further away from the source it gets. It breaks down.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- >Obviously the creationist (or equivanent thereof) who posted the original
- >question has never been to Los Angeles! :-)
-
-
- >3. Water, though eight hundred times heavier than air, is held in droplets,
- >by the millions of tins, miles above the ground.
-
- A suspension.
- William D. Sears adds:
- > A poing of information: water stays in the air about 7 days on average.
- > You might want to point out RAIN here, since obviously the water does
- > not stay up in the air.
-
- >4. Even if perfect elasticity is a quality of the molecules of all gasses, the
- >motion of the molecules, if affected by a mechanical cause, must subside
- >because of the gravitational attraction between the particles and also because of the
- >gravitational pull of the earth.
-
- He appears to thing that there is some kind of gravitational collapse here? I would
- think that a brief study of the kinetic property of gasses would easily show the
- fallacy in this statement.
-
- William D. Sears asks:
- > Ask him where the thermal energy would go.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }No, it's just that the moron has never heard of (or didn't understand)
- }statistical mechanics. In particular, the names Maxwell and Boltzman are
- }clearly foreign to him.
-
- >5. The weight of the atmosphere is constantly changing as the changing barometric
- >pressure indicates.
-
- yup. It is a dynamic media that is often out of equilibrium.
-
- >6. Laplace... came to the conclusion that the atmosphere...must be lenticular in form,
- >its polar and equatorial axes must be 35,000 and 52,000 miles respectively; at the
- >equator the atmosphere must extend more than 21,000 miles....From the measurement of
- >the pressure of the earth's atmosphere...it has been deduced that the atmosphere is but
- >17 miles high. Observation of the flight of meteorites and of the polar auroras
- >lead to the conjecture that the atmosphere reaches...130 miles...or over 400 miles.
- >Radio measurements yield about 200 miles for the upper layer recognizable through this
- >method of investigation.
-
- So Velikovsky has shown that Laplace had an incredible misunderstanding of the
- atmosphere. The "17 miles high" seems to assume that an elastic gas behaved
- inelastically. I am not especially suprised when ignorance does not agree with
- misconception.
-
- >7. ...As the movement of anticyclones cannot be explained by the mechanistic principles
- >of gravitation and rotation, it must be concluded that the rotation of cyclones is also
- >unexplained.
-
- I do not recall any such problem.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }But the moron in question appears to be of the opinion that he can observe the
- }coriolis effect using a toilet a foot from the equator.
-
- >8. ...the unequal distribution of masses (land in northers vs southern hemispheres)
- >does not effect the position of the earth...Also, the seasonal distribution of ice and
- >snow, shifting in a distillation process from one hemisphere to the other, should
- >interfere with the equilibrium of the earth, but fails to do so.
-
- What does "effect the position of the earth" and "equilibrium of the earth" mean,
- and how large effect should a tiny fraction of one percent have?
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }I think that the moron assumes that, if we get too much snow in the southern
- }hemisphere, it will make the earth flip :-)
-
- >9. Mountainous masses do not exert the gravitational pull expected by the theory of
- >gravitation.
-
- News to me. He's quoting 1855 reports. What does more recent observation indicate?
- I've been directly involved in a project where the seabed was mapped using this
- trick - I recall no such problem.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }News to NASA, too. They've had to take mascons into consideration for quite
- }some time now.
-
-
- >10. Over the oceans, the gravitational pull is greater than over the continents, though
- >according to the theory of gravitation the reverse should be true...
-
- huh? This appears to be from a 1939 paper. Any recent observations?
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >Okay, if you've been involved in seabed mapping you know more about this
- >than me, but it sounds right that the gravity should be greater at sea level
- >ie. closer to the Earth's centre. Probably Velikovsky was thinking 'Ah,
- >land = more mass = more gravity'. But the land has the *same mass* as the
- >ocean bed. It floats like an iceberg because it has lower density. Can you
- >say 'isostatic equilibrium', Immanuel?
-
-
- >11. The atmospheric pressure of the sun, instead of being 27.47 times greater than the
- >atmospheric pressure of the earth (as expected because of the large solar mass), is much
- >smaller...
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >'The atmospheric pressure', what's that? Pressure in the Sun's atmosphere,
- >like that in the Earth's, varies with depth. Comparing the Sun's outer
- >atmosphere with the Earth's at sea level is comparing apples with oranges.
-
- >12. Because of its swift rotation, the gasseous sun should have a latitudinal axis
- >greater than the longitudinal, but it does not have it.
-
- Why should it? Does someone have the supporting calculations that Velikovsky's
- paper does not provide?
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >It should, and it does, but not to the naked eye. Some observations,
- >Immanuel, are not obvious. And the correct terms are polar radius and
- >equatorial radius. Read the literature.
-
- >13. If planets and satellites were once molten masses...they would not have been able to
- >obtain spherical form, especially those which do not rotate, as Mercury or the moon (with
- >respect to its primary)
-
- I do not see this conclusion. Even drops of water, not rotating, go spherical in
- free fall.
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > His point is that tides should warp the blobs into oblongs. Of course,
- > he is wrong about Mercury not rotating wrt the Sun and even for the Moon
- > we believe it formed rotating asynchronously and later obtained its presetn
- > rotation state. Note that all observed planets that I know of are NOT
- > spherical, they are slightly oblate.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }But, you see, the moron doesn't understand that if you seek to minimize
- }gravitational potential of an homogenous substance, you end up putting it in a
- }spheres. Obviously he's also got an anti-gravity machine he wants to sell us!
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >The water drops are minimising surface energy, and the molten planets were
- >minimising potential energy. The big ones would have done so even if they
- >were not molten. Mountain ranges are ephemeral phenomena. Rotation has
- >nothing to do with gravity, unless you are a crank.
- otter wrote:
-
- >14. ...The Newtonian orbits (calculated) differ from the Keplerian, found empirically.
-
- How so? (Do they?) The space program seems to do quite well with Newtonian
- calculations...
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > The real point that should be noted here is that the Keplerian orbits are
- > not as precise as the calculated ones. Therefore the REAL orbits differ
- > from the Keplerian ones, and are much closer to the calculated ones.
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >Kepler's orbits would fit Newton's exactly in the two-body case. Newton
- >allows for the perturbation caused by third, fourth etc. bodies. Einstein
- >allows for changes in the shape of spacetime. Science gets better, Immanuel.
-
-
- >15. Perturbations of planets due to their reciprocal action are pronounced in repulsion
- >as well as attraction.
-
- huh? In his paper he gave no references to this. Anyone know anything?
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > I would love to hear more about this one, unless he is referriing to the
- > fact that the attractive forces can interact with the orbital motions in
- > such a way as to move the items further apart. This is not a repulsion.
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >Sounds like complete gibberish to me. Where are your data, Immanuel?
-
- >16. The perturbating activity appears unstable in the major planets...As these planets
- >did not increase in mass in the meantime, this change is not understandable from...theory
- >of gravitation, which includes the principle of the immutable gravitational constant.
-
- The time is 1898-1899. What happened?
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > Unstable does not necessarily mean that anything is changing. After all
- > a pencil balanced on its point is unstable and will most likely fall,
- > but nothing in the nature of gravity has to change to have this happen.
- > Also see recent ideas of chaos theory.
-
- >17. The pressure of light emanating from the sun should slowly change the orbits of the
- >satellites...but this change fails to materialize; a regulating force seems to overcome
- >this unequal light pressure on primaries and secondaries.
-
- I may be incorrect, but photonic/solar wind pressure seems several orders of magnitude
- for this to have an observable effect.
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > Try MANY orders of magnitude for planet sized objects. Refer to the
- > concept of solar sail spacecraft.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }Even it that weren't the case, the moron has missed an important point: Light
- }pressure on the Earth in January is equal and opposite to light pressure in
- }June. The net effect of this light pressure is to increase the diameter of the
- }Earth's orbit.
-
- trygve lode adds:
- }One minor quibble, and one that doesn't detract from your point at all, is
- }that the light pressure (and, for that matter, the solar wind) exerts a
- }force on the earth that is equal and opposite in June and January, but
- }this force is not entirely radial and acts to reduce the angular momentum of
- }earth slightly throughout its orbit. Thus, instantaneously, the orbit is
- }minutely larger than it would be without the solar radiation, but over
- }time it acts to reduce the size of the orbit (also minutely).
-
-
- >18. The sun moves in space...This motion, according to Lodge (1918) must change the
- >eccentricties of some of the planetary orbits to an extent that far exceeds the observed
- >values.
-
- Anything more recent than a 1918 calculation not borne out by observation? What did
- he do wrong?
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > I have not seen this calculation, but even Newtonian relativity should
- > indicate that there should be no effect. The only thing that I can
- > think of here is the tidal forces might have an influence. However,
- > I suspect that the effect of passing stars will be larger.
-
-
- >19. The motion of the perihelia of Mercury and Mars and of the nodes of Venus differ
- >from what is computed with the help of the Newtonian law of gravitation...the
- >irregularities in the movements of venus and mars cannot be accounted for by Einstein's
- >formula.
-
- What irregulatrities?
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > He is referring to the precession of the orbits. However, the input into
- > these calculations is not known well enough to eliminate any remaining
- > problem from being just errors in the input rather than the calculation.
- > I am not aware of exactly what he is referencing here, though.
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >The motion of the perihelion of Mercury differs signicantly from Newtonian
- >calculations. This is accounted for by General Relativity. The rest is
- >unsupported assertion.
-
- >20. Unaccounted for fluctuations in the lunar mean motion were calculated from the
- >records of lunar eclipses of many centuries and from modern observations.
-
- And are they accounted for now?
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >Yes, the lunar mean motion has been decreasing due to tidal interactions
- >with the Earth for at least 600 million years. This was considered to be
- >sufficient explanation at the time, but Velikovsky chooses to ignore this.
- >Too inconvenient. One problem was that the current rate, extrapolated
- >backward, would have had the Moon crashing into the Earth 600 million years
- >ago. Very Velikovskian, but unfortunately, the timescale is not biblical
- >enough. Anyway, we now know that the current rate of recession is unusually
- >high because of the current arrangement of the continents, particularly
- >South America, Africa and Australia.
-
- >21. (paraphrase: variance in altitude of ionosphere as observed through radio
- >transmissions cannot be explained by tidal forces)
-
- What does tide have to do with ionospheric effects? Solar radiation, yes.
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > Tides should have some effect, however it is not a major one. Your point
- > is well taken.
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >The variation of atmospheric height caused by thermal radiation is
- >incorrectly known as 'thermal tide'. Neither this nor the other kind
- >of tide has anything to do with ionosphere height, which is caused by
- >UV radiation.
-
- >22. The tails of the comets do not obey the principle of gravitation and are repelled by
- >the sun.
-
- He should read his own paper, item 17. The solar wind (streaming protons) combined
- with photonic pressure explain this phonomena quite well.
-
- >23. The change in the angular velocity of comets is not in accordance with the
- >theoretical computations based on the theory of gravitation.
-
- He refers to a german encyclopedia article. What is current data?
-
- William D. Sears adds:
- > Unknown, however, I hope that whoever wrote that article takes into
- > account the random effects of 'jets' or plums from the surface. These
- > will act like rockets and change the orbit of the comet.
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >Did you see those pictures of Halley by the Giotto probe? Huge geysers
- >shooting out of the ground as the comet warms up. The comet is small
- >enough that this has a significant effect on the orbit. This was known
- >in Immanuel's time.
-
- >24.Meteors, after entering the terrestrial atmosphere at about 200km above the ground,
- >are violently displaced towards the east.
-
- What is he talking about?
-
- Del Cotter wrote:
- >Gibberish. Because the earth is spinning anticlockwise as seen from the
- >north pole, meteors statistically have a mean *westwards* velocity relative
- >to the ground. They do not suddenly acquire this on contact with the
- >atmosphere.
-
- Carl J Lydick writes:
- }Well, if you send something toward the center of the Earth, then to an object
- }on the surface, it looks like it's moving east. Once again you've denied one
- }of the moron's premises: The Earth is the fixed, unmoving, center of the
- }universe. You're assuming the Earth rotates. The moron should castigate you
- }for that heresy!
-
- >25. As the principle of gravitation leaves no room for the participation of other forces
- >in the ordinary movements of the celestial mechanism...
-
- Sure it does. I'd be amazed at anything that claimed otherwise.
-
- Velikovsky's "theory" may be necessary to "explain" his misunderstandings, but the
- 'problems' he mentioned simply do not exist.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Who's who in my additions:
-
- William Sears
- Lunar and Planetary Lab
- wsears@lpl.arizona.edu
- Info: I am a PhD candidate in Planetary Science at the University of Arizona.
-
-
- Carl J Lydick | INTERnet: CARL@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU | NSI/HEPnet: SOL1::CARL
- Del Cotter mt90dac@brunel.ac.uk
-
- --
- James W. Meritt: m23364@mwunix.mitre.org - or - jmeritt@mitre.org
- The opinions above are mine. If anyone else wants to share them, fine.
- They may say so if they wish. The facts "belong" to noone and simply are.
-