Something seems wrong with the laws of physics

hamelekim

Graduate Poster
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May 19, 2007
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Interesting article from the Economist on a phenomenon that has no explanation.

http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10804075

I wonder what else we really don't know about the physics of the universe.

As it was flung around the Earth in what is known as a slingshot manoeuvre (designed to speed it on its way to the outer solar system), Galileo picked up more velocity than expected. Not much. Four millimetres a second, to be precise. But well within the range that can reliably be detected.

Once might be happenstance. But this strange extra acceleration was seen subsequently with two other craft. That, as Goldfinger would have put it, looks like enemy action. So a team from JPL has got together to analyse all of the slingshot manoeuvres that have been carried out over the years, to see if they really do involve a small but systematic extra boost. The answer is that they do.

Altogether, John Anderson and his colleagues analysed six slingshots involving five different spacecraft. Their paper on the matter is about to be published in Physical Review Letters. Crucially for the idea that there really is a systematic flaw in the laws of physics as they are understood today, their data can be described by a simple formula. It is therefore possible to predict what should happen on future occasions.

What it all means is not yet clear. Perhaps there is some overlooked explanation within the laws of physics. But Le Verrier thought that must be so for his discovery, too. He and later astronomers spent decades looking for the missing planet within the orbit of Mercury which, they were convinced, explained what was going on. They even gave it a name: Vulcan. But it wasn't there.

I hope they figure it out someday.
 

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