[NewCandle] More spacecraft velocity anomalies

Keith Nagel NewCandleAdmin at ipdiscover.com
Fri Feb 29 14:16:58 EST 2008


Hey Horace,

You and I have batted around these ideas before on Vo.
I seem to remember you were trying to come up with
the anomaly from first principles. Why not do the
reverse, that is, start from the measured anomaly
and see what the gravitomagnetic coupling coefficient would be
( not sure what your nomenclature is, but it would
be the GM equivalent of mu0 for the magnetic field ).
>From that, and the value of G, you can determine
the speed of gravity waves. As coupling seems much
larger than what GR predicts, the speed
of gravity would be much slower than C. If you
address these things in your papers now, I
apologize, I'm running out the door and won't
have a chance to re-read them until the weekend.
I'll poke around a bit more for information about
this anomaly, I think there is an associated paper
but I might have to 'liberate' it.

Gold mine is just a phrase, although a better
understanding of how to engineer large gravitomagnetic
fields would be on par with the transistor in
terms of industrial application.

BTW, are you aware that Earthtech is trying a replication
of Martin Tajmars excellent work on GM measurements
in low temp superconductors?

http://www.earthtech.org/experiments/tajmar/

K. 


-----Original Message-----
From: newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com
[mailto:newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com]On Behalf Of Horace Heffner
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 10:53 AM
To: New energy for the new world.
Subject: Re: [NewCandle] More spacecraft velocity anomalies



On Feb 29, 2008, at 8:59 AM, Keith Nagel wrote:

> Pioneer 10 was not just an anomaly
>
> http://www.aip.org/pnu/2008/split/857-2.html
>
> What do you call an anomaly that happens all the time?
> I call it a gold mine waiting for a claim.


I don't see this as much of gold mine, or even surprise.  It is  
probably just the slingshot effect, transfer of a planet's momentum  
to a low mass passerby, as applied by a gravimagnetic Lorentz force.

http://mtaonline.net/~hheffner/FullGravimag.pdf

http://mtaonline.net/~hheffner/PioneerAnom.pdf

Too bad "a path mostly symmetrical with respect to the equator" is  
not more specifically defined. There is no reference to any article  
describing this, as far as I can see.  I didn't see anything about it  
on the Near site:

http://near.jhuapl.edu/


Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/




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