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Space

Computer Forensics to Help Solve Pioneer Mystery 113

Matthew Sparkes writes "Launched 35 years ago on Friday, Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to reach the outer Solar System and return pictures of Jupiter, closely followed by Pioneer 11. However, the twin Pioneer spacecraft drifted off course (see number 8) by hundreds of thousands of kilometres during their three-decade mission, and NASA eventually lost contact with them. An international team of scientists, including many amatuer hobbyists, are re-analysing the tracking and telemetry data in the hope of discovering the reason."
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Computer Forensics to Help Solve Pioneer Mystery

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  • Only hundreds of thousands of miles? Thats not too bad given the size of the solar system.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Only hundreds of thousands of miles? Thats not too bad given the size of the solar system.

      Yeah, but it's hundreds of thousands of kilometers.

      [french guy]Sacre bleu!![/]
      • Only hundreds of thousands of miles? Thats not too bad given the size of the solar system.

        Yeah, but it's hundreds of thousands of kilometers.

        Even better!
    • "Only hundreds of thousands of miles? Thats not too bad given the size of the solar system."

      Considering how horrible cruise control was back in those days, I am suprised they made it as far as they did.
  • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohnNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Monday March 05, 2007 @08:41AM (#18236510) Journal

    Computer Forensics to Solve Pioneer Mystery
    No, there's a 50/50 chance they "solve" the mystery.

    As the article states:

    If the direction is towards the Earth, it almost certainly indicates the anomaly was caused by faulty technology or an artifact of receiving the data at the ground stations. If, however, the direction is towards the Sun, new gravitational physics may be needed to explain the effect.
    So if the direction of deceleration is towards Earth, then you might be able to consider the mystery solved and blame it on the process of collecting the data. But if the deceleration is towards the sun or another direction, we have an observation of an unknown effect in physics. If the latter is the case, I think the mystery is just starting to be understood--with a long ways to go and many more observations before we can consider it solved.
    • by TorKlingberg ( 599697 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:44AM (#18237084)
      You have a point, but that doesn't make it a 50/50 chance. It would if the direction was selected at random and the reason assigned afterwards, but that's not how it works.
      • by gilroy ( 155262 )
        Nah, the GPP was correct. It's why I always thought fill-in-the-blank was better than multiple choice. For the latter, your chance is 1 out of (say) 5, or 20%. But with fill-in-the-blank, you're either right or you're not -- so your chance is 50%. :)
        • Right --- like some farmers I knew. "Chance of rain is always 50%, every day. It either rains or it don't." Why do we make meteorology so complicated? :)
          • Hmm.. I've always said that my chance of winning the lottery was 50/50. Either I win or I don't. Binary solution set. I've just had a string almost unbelievable bad luck and I've gotten the loosing side for the last ten years.
    • No, there's a 50/50 chance they "solve" the mystery.

      I make the line about 0.9999999/0.0000001. One side is a perfectly reasonable explanation, while the other side implies some completely unknown effect.

      • Dark matter apparently has a huge gravitational impact on the behavior of galaxies and clusters of galaxies. If this turns out to be real and not an artifact of the data, it could give us a clue about which way we should be looking for this mysterious stuff.
    • by mollymoo ( 202721 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @05:50PM (#18243650) Journal

      So if the direction of deceleration is towards Earth, then you might be able to consider the mystery solved and blame it on the process of collecting the data. But if the deceleration is towards the sun or another direction, we have an observation of an unknown effect in physics. If the latter is the case, I think the mystery is just starting to be understood--with a long ways to go and many more observations before we can consider it solved.

      No, we may have an observation of unknown physics. We may also have an observation of well-known physics which nobody has been able to quantify. The acceleration is sufficiently small and the two Pioneer craft so similar (virtually identical, in fact) that nobody has conclusively ruled out such trivialities as the colour of the paint having changed or a thicker-than-expected layer of dust having formed - effects like these could be sufficient to cause the observed anomalous acceleration (think 'solar sails' for similar physics, but with the Pioneers emitting radiation as well as reflecting it). It really is a tiny effect.

      The problem with ruling these kinds of effects out is that the Pioneers are the only suitable craft we have which have been going far enough for long enough to provide good data. The Voyager craft have gone a long way too, but they aren't spin-stabilised (like a bullet from a rifled firearm) like the Pioneers; they are stabilized by thrusters and firing the thrusters causes sufficient uncertainty that the anomalous acceleration is lost in noise. I recall a paper which looked at other spin-stabilised craft during their cruise phase to other planets which also reported the anomaly, but again the data was too noisy to be entirely convincing. We really need a new mission to test this anomaly properly before we can say there is any new physics.
    • by Kris_J ( 10111 ) *
      -1, Moron.

      Two outcomes are not automatically of equal probability.
  • Pioneer anomaly (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mastershake_phd ( 1050150 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @08:47AM (#18236548) Homepage
    while it is possible that the explanation will be mundane--such as thrust from gas leakage--the possibility of entirely new physics is also being considered. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pioneer_anomaly [wikipedia.org]

    Strangest of all:

    Data from the Galileo and Ulysses spacecraft indicate a similar effect
    • It's clearly the fault of either the galactic barrier or a bored, trigger-happy Klingon captain.
    • by cbacba ( 944071 )
      maybe the lid to the petri dish is lined with aerogel out past Pluto.

      It's always best to posit new physics as the answer rather than to blame it on the rather mundane things. After all, it's not a perfect vacuum there, light carries momentum as does cosmic radiation and there are likely to be plenty of objects out there with gravitational effects that haven't or can't be seen. There are many fairly mundane reasons why. But, it's more fun to decide it's the reason why the Michaelson Morely experiment fai
  • Dark Matter!

    Seriously, though, how likely is it that the gravitational and orbital calculations were just not quite as precise when they did them 35 years ago?

    Despite a highly rigorous formula for determining this stuff, I can imagine that there could have been a few unknowns that affected such an enormously complex calculation.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by symes ( 835608 )
      I'm guessing here, but surely NASA wrote all their own code and didn't rely on freeware [vowe.net]?

      And another guess, but surely the gentlest squirrel's fart as the craft left Earth could translate to huge discrepancies by the time they get to the other side of the solar system?

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward
        surely the gentlest squirrel's fart as the craft left Earth

        Or, of course, as it swung by Uranus.
        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          Ob. Futurama quote:

          "I'm sorry, Fry, but astronomers renamed Uranus in 2620 to end that stupid joke once and for all. "

      • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:29AM (#18236928) Journal
        > And another guess, but surely the gentlest squirrel's fart as
        > the craft left Earth could translate to huge discrepancies by
        > the time they get to the other side of the solar system?

        Yes, a one-off measurement error at launch would turn into hundreds of thousands of miles difference years later. However, the positions of the craft all along the way show it is still slowing down too fast.

        In your terms, the squirrel must be hiding on board and farting from time to time on a reqular basis and in the direction of travel, slowing it.
        • So how is telemetry calculated? I don't know a great about astrophysics and the like, but surely position is relative to something? Is it at all plausible that some unknown factor in, for example, the solar systems movement accounts for this deviation and that pioneer has actually remained on course?
        • I for one welcome our space faring farting squirrel overlords.

          Sorry I just had to...
        • Your sig (off topic) (Score:2, Informative)

          by sbjornda ( 199447 )
          This is the first time I've noticed your sig line, so please excuse me if someone has already answered your question.

          Who the f*** decided that sentences on the Internet shall no longer be formatted with two spaces after a period?!

          Actually, the two-space convention was an invention of the fixed-pitch typewriter age. Proportional typefaces (which preceed the typewriter by centuries) generally include a bit of extra space after the period. When typewriters became common, this was simulated by hitting the s

          • That is very interesting. While fixed-pitch fonts may be declining, I think laziness is the primary motivator of single spacing. I can't think of any fonts off the top of my head that don't look wrong when formatted with a single space.
            • Let's test that theory.

              Here is a period with one space after it, I type the space. Here is the second sentence.

              Here is a period where I type no spaces after it.Here is the second sentence.

              Here is the period embedded in numbers 123.456.
              • Based on this test, it's clear that the period, properly, has no space (beyond very minimal) as part of its kerning or built in spacing, either before or after it.

                I've edited the proportional fonts we use on various embedded products to alter the kerning tables (contextual, e.g. i after f you back up the i one or two pixels, but not for any other letters) and inherent character widths ('1' is always as wide as '2' and any other digit, even in proportional fonts, say, to make multidigit numbers line up verti
                • by lhbtubajon ( 469284 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @03:22PM (#18241584)
                  The theory proposed by the grandparent (or was it the great-grandparent) poster is almost correct, but is mis-stated somewhat.

                  It is not that modern proportional typefaces have extra space after the period, it is that typewriters' fixed-fonts padded the period with extra space to make it take up the same space as a 'W', for example. Therefore, if you didn't hit the spacebar twice, it became somewhat difficult, optically, to discern where sentences began and ended.

                  Since modern typefaces no longer have to pad the period with extra space, the single space is more than sufficient for discerning sentence beginnings and endings.

                  Note that it has always been AP and Chicago style to put only one space after each sentence-ending character (. ? !).
        • In your terms, the squirrel must be hiding on board and farting from time to time on a reqular basis and in the direction of travel, slowing it.

          Well, you know what they say, often the most unlikely answer is the correct one...
    • by mcelrath ( 8027 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @12:02PM (#18238906) Homepage

      The codes used took into account all the major sources of gravity, including all the planets and major asteroids. These are some of the same codes that have been used to place many, many other probes in proper orbits around planetary bodies as far away as Saturn, and land on tiny things like asteroids and comets.

      The damned thing about the Pioneer anomaly is that the acceleration is constant and the measurement is exceedingly simple. It's just position vs. time. There isn't much that can mess with that, and since individual communications with the craft are uncorrelated with each other, there shouldn't be any kind of drift (relativistic clock drifts are taken into account). Since the acceleration is constant over a distance from roughly Jupiter to well past Pluto, and gravity follows a force law that goes like 1/r^2, you can't add a single source of gravity (e.g. a new planet) -- the force wouldn't be constant. You can't make the sun slightly heavier. You can't add dark matter to do it: the dark matter would have to conspire to have a density as a function of distance from the sun that mimicked the constant acceleration. Such a density profile has more dark matter at the edges of the solar system, which would not be stable. It should collapse and concentrate near the sun. The acceleration is approximately the same magnitude as the expansion of the universe, but it's in the wrong direction, and our current understanding of dark energy wouldn't cause such an effect anyway.

      Personally, I think we've got gravity totally wrong.

      -- Bob

    • by ChrisA90278 ( 905188 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @01:07PM (#18239796)
      "Seriously, though, how likely is it that the gravitational and orbital calculations were just not quite as precise when they did them 35 years ago?"

      Do you think the calculation was done only once? No. It's pretty much a continuous process. While the calculation would have been as accurate 35 years ago as today. (People have known how to multiply and divide out to many decimal places for century's now) What's changes and what limits our ability is that we don't exactly know the exact mass and location of every object in the Solar System. But if you track the spacecraft you can deduce forces acting on it by where it goes. The anomaly here is that we know the force but can't explain it in terms of gravity. The most likely thing is a small leak in the plumbing that acts like a weak jet. It could also be explained by some revolutionary physics. But if you look back in history and count the number of time plumbing has leaked vs. the number of times physics hes been re-written. My money is on the 30 year old plumbing.

      It's not a case of not hitting the spot that was aimed for but of watching a curve develop over decades and seeing the curve be a shape that is not quite what one would expect if only gravity were the cause.
  • It will be relatively easy for them to find something in all that complexity that may possibly be to blame, then totally ignore the possibility that this really might be an unknown external influence.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by speardane ( 905475 )
      The article makes it clear they're trying to discover the cause. That so many different parties are involved, it would be unlikely that anyone would deliberately ignore "an unknown external influence". - a false negative. Indeed it would be strange to put that much effort in without the potential excitement of really discovering something. an increased risk of a false positive. Peer review of the results is a powerful tool for this kind of issue...
      • by h2g2bob ( 948006 )
        If the explanation is mundane, it will help with the design of future spacecraft.

        However, gravity is still not fully understood, and it could well be that the gravitational laws are wrong. This could provide an indication of that.
    • It would actually make sense to look for a single condition in the myriad of possible known phenomena. That's basically what Occam's Razor says. There's no sense in looking for a complex or radical solution until all of the simple possibilities have been exhausted.

      This doesn't mean that I'm advocating ignoring re-investigating things from fairly basic principles, but at the same time I think that it would be foolish to immediately assume that something that we haven't yet had any notion of is the culprit.
    • It will be relatively easy for them to find something in all that complexity that may possibly be to blame, then totally ignore the possibility that this really might be an unknown external influence.
      And your point is...?
  • Given that Gravity affects an object's momentum, in this solar system, and was used for acceleration by the Pioneer craft. Would not a simple calculation of finding how much gravity would be needed to cause the "drift"? Then the question could be asked, "What combination of bodies in the known space would cause this?"
  • I hope they fail. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by grimJester ( 890090 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:00AM (#18236662)
    Heh. I think most of us here on Slashdot would want this anomaly to be due to new and k3wl physics rather than some mundane error. The Pioneer anomaly is one of, if not the most interesting unexplained observation I know of.
    • The Pioneer anomaly is one of, if not the most interesting unexplained observation I know of.

      About time really, "women" have held that title for far too long. :)

      *runs for cover*
  • One word.. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Rob T Firefly ( 844560 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:01AM (#18236682) Homepage Journal
    V'ger. [memory-alpha.org]

    I suppose it would actually be P'neer, but that just doesn't sound right somehow.
  • by Edzor ( 744072 )
    there was a '0' where there should of been a '1'.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      There was an "of" where a "have" should have been.
  • Ambiguous summary (Score:4, Informative)

    by hcdejong ( 561314 ) <`hobbes' `at' `xmsnet.nl'> on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:18AM (#18236822)
    However, the twin Pioneer spacecraft drifted off course (see number 8) by hundreds of thousands of kilometres during their three-decade mission, and NASA eventually lost contact with them.

    This seems to imply that NASA lost contact because the spacecraft drifted off-course. AIU, they lost contact because the signals became too weak to be readable (due to distance and/or degradation of the RTG).
  • by imipak ( 254310 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:19AM (#18236834) Journal
    I love this story, it's been popping up every now & then ever since my first accepted Slashdot submission [slashdot.org] on the topic more than five years ago... it's really very interesting, even if (as seems likely) it turns out the be a missing factor or inaccurate measurement somewhere, rather than a Whole New Physics[tm].
  • I've often wondered whether gravity is really exactly a one-over-r-squared phenomenon. I would think that between the curvature of space, strange hidden dimensions, dark matter and dark energy, that things would not be exactly Euclidean and that the exponent on the equation for gravity wouldn't be an integer.

    IANAP, but as an engineer I've learned that so-called "constants" seldom are.
    • by samkass ( 174571 )
      If it were that simple, we'd have seen the anomaly in the orbits of the outer planets.
    • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

      I've often wondered whether gravity is really exactly a one-over-r-squared phenomenon. I would think that between the curvature of space...

      That's a bit like saying "I've often wondered whether or not there's a faster way to add numbers, I would think that between the invention of abaci, calculators and computers...". If you read this [wikipedia.org] maybe you can catch up with the rest of the world.

    • We know it is not a 1/r^2 force phenomenom. We call it general relativity. In general relativity gravity isnt even a force as things just move along geodesics in spacetime. Geodesics are "straight lines" in curved spacetime, but mind you, these are actually have longest "length" with the metric. I think the model they use to calculate trajectories is probably one of the approximations between newtonian and relativistic physics.
      One of the first proofs was the orbit of Mercury, so it is very onlikely that the
  • What of Other Craft? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by necro81 ( 917438 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:51AM (#18237182) Journal
    We are still in contact with the Voyager probes, and they have, at this point, traveled further out of the solar system than the Pioneer probes. Has the same anomaly been spotted in their trajectories too? That would be of great importance in weeding out possible phenomena.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      The problem seems to be "These spacecraft are all partially or fully spin-stabilised; the effect is harder to measure accurately with three-axis stabilised craft such as the Voyagers." (quoted from wikipedia). Some other spin stabilized spacecrafts also show the anomaly, however, it is more difficult to be sure of them because most others are too close to the sun.

      • In other words: no, the voyager probes don't show the same effect. Spinning or not spinning is hardly going to make it hard to detect being off course by hundreds of thousands of miles.
        • by AJWM ( 19027 )
          Spinning or not spinning is hardly going to make it hard to detect being off course by hundreds of thousands of miles.

          True enough, but 3-axis stabilization (not spinning) implies some kind of reaction control system (*) that may be cancelling this unknown effect as it stabilizes the spacecraft, i.e. it also corrects the course.

          (* Even if the primary attitude control is via momentum wheel, you still some kind of thruster-based RCS system to periodically dump the momentum you're building up in those wheels.)
          • i.e. it also corrects the course.

            Smells like a big coincidence that a mechanism that stabilises the attitude of the spacecraft happens to exactly balance out, in every case, the effect of some unknown error in the laws of gravity (or whatever). And, given that the cause of the effect on Pioneer is unknown, why pick on spin stabilisation as the thing that is preventing it from happening to other craft?
  • by Ruvim ( 889012 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @09:54AM (#18237212)
    It just fell off the back of the turtle and found its demise under legs of the elephants holding it!
  • by gentimjs ( 930934 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @10:29AM (#18237582) Journal
    It seems to be a no-brainer that the most likely cause is gravitaional force from something we didnt know was there. Some kupier belt trash, comet that passed it years ago, who knows. I'm frankly surprised that these types of navigational issues were/are not expected .....
    • by egomaniac ( 105476 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @10:47AM (#18237802) Homepage
      It's not that simple. We obviously can't account for each chunk of rock orbiting the Sun, but we also don't need to. We instead make very precise measurements of the orbits of the outer planets, and those orbits do reflect every speck of dust in the solar system. What we're seeing is that Pioneer's path does not reflect exactly the same forces that the outer planets agree are present, and that's the part that's hard to explain.

      Note that this argument also gives a pretty clear idea of why most scientists don't seriously think that there is new physics involved here -- if (say) gravity operated differently at extreme distances, it would already have shown up in the orbits of the outer planets. Instead we see all of the outer planets in precise agreement about all of the forces, and then Pioneer having a dissenting opinion for some reason. So most of the searching is for Pioneer-specific effects, like dust (which wouldn't measurably slow down somethng the size of a planet) or gas leakages.
  • You forgot to say... (Score:3, Informative)

    by Bromskloss ( 750445 ) <auxiliary.addres ... nOspAm.gmail.com> on Monday March 05, 2007 @10:48AM (#18237812)
    ...that what you are talking about is the Pioneer anomaly [wikipedia.org]. That is a well-known name, so when you didn't mention it, you got me thinking there was some other curiosity going on that I had missed.
  • Those black monoliths are distracting and meddlesome.
  • FDIV? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @11:02AM (#18237978)
    Pentium FDIV bug?
  • So you mean we probably shouldn't have carved *all* our names in the *same* RTG boom with the dremel?
    We weren't supposed to do that?

  • by Chacham ( 981 )
    What are the chances it merged up with an alien life form, and together they are charting their own course?
  • Hanging out at the planetarium growing up, I got exposed to a lot of notions of the physical universe.... One that stuck was the notion that the universe is like an expanding balloon; this model answered the red shift problem. If you look from a point to any other point as the baloon inflates, its all moving away from you. Now the black hole theory with this expansive universe; if you hold a stationary pin to the balloon while it expands, expansion occurs at a different rate about the head, and effective
  • I think we are really looking at space not actually being a void but has gases, matter, and a drag coefficient. If the ships hit gas bubbles it would also slow down the craft.

    The rules of space are different from the rules of the earth and should be dealt with in the same matter.

    Our scientist do not truly know the G forces or actual size to the decimal of any planets beyond mars, the theory of how much thrust would it take to break orbit was off a few degrees, This is also a possible account of what happene
  • by Fantastic Lad ( 198284 ) on Monday March 05, 2007 @03:13PM (#18241470)
    Neat article. It's a tribute to the practice of true Science when things which don't fit are not brushed under the rug.

    The Kuiper Cliff (#10) fascinates me. I'd not heard about that, but I was aware that a peculiar wobble in the orbits of all the planets suggested that a very large object was orbiting in the distance. The Twin Sun theories are very interesting, especially in how they link to cyclical comet clusters bombarding the earth into the stone age every few thousand years. We're due right now, according to some.

    I also find #12 interesting. (The not-so-constant constants). At first glance, it appears to fit well with the idea that there are various levels of energy 'density', providing different levels of reality in which beings can exist. One idea posits that UFOs are visitors from a higher level of reality which is constantly around us.

    #13 is funny. (Cold Fusion), --Largely because the editor used pissy wording to describe Pons & Fleischmann's work, probably because he was numbered among those who scoffed at the pair and would prefer to believe that it was somehow the two researcher's faults that he wasn't smart or brave enough to give them more credit.)

    And of course #4. (Homeopathy). The solution to accepting that homeopathy works links nicely with many other theories considered bunkish, but which also "somehow" carry weight. Basically, it's not the molecule as much as it is the energetic vibration of the molecule which carries information, and which responds to the body. This is Chi in a nutshell; a whole layer of energetic reality which affects pretty much everything in our universe, upon which astrology, awareness and the spirit, (among other things) are based, but which nobody wants to look at. Except the dark corners of the military, which know how to manipulate aspects of it. CFL's produce how much radio interference? More than cell phones and microwaves and TV's? Hmm.


    -FL

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 05, 2007 @04:08PM (#18242158)
    Here's a link to the cannonical paper on the issue: http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0104064 [arxiv.org]

    Also, if you're interested, and in the New York area, some of the scientists who've been working on this are speaking at the Hayden planetarium in a few weeks: http://haydenplanetarium.org/programs/asimov/ [haydenplanetarium.org]

    Just to give a feel for what obsessive level of detail we're dealing with, here's a list of the possible causes considered in the paper above. The numbers after each listing are the bias and uncertainty in units of 10^-8 cm/sec^2. Listings with only one number only have an uncertainity, not a bias.

    1 Systematics generated external to the spacecraft:
      a) Solar radiation pressure and mass +0.03 ±0.01
      b) Solar wind ± 10^-5
      c) Solar corona ±0.02
      d) Electro-magnetic Lorentz forces ± 10^-4
      e) Influence of the Kuiper belt's gravity ±0.03
      f) Influence of the Earth orientation ±0.001
      g) Mechanical and phase stability of DSN antennae ± 0.001
      h) Phase stability and clocks ± 0.001
      i) DSN station location ± 10^-5
      j) Troposphere and ionosphere ± 0.001
    2 On-board generated systematics:
      a) Radio beam reaction force +1.10 ±0.11
      b) RTG heat reflected off the craft -0.55 ±0.55
      c) Differential emissivity of the RTGs ±0.85
      d) Non-isotropic radiative cooling of the spacecraft ±0.48
      e) Expelled Helium produced within the RTGs +0.15 ±0.16
      f) Gas leakage ±0.56
      g) Variation between spacecraft determinations +0.17 ±0.17
    3 Computational systematics:
      a) Numerical stability of least-squares estimation ±0.02
      b) Accuracy of consistency/model tests ±0.13
      c) Mismodeling of maneuvers ±0.01
      d) Mismodeling of the solar corona ±0.02
      e) Annual/diurnal terms ±0.32
  • Because when I read that headline, I was wondering how computer forensics were being used with Lewis and Clark or the like. Maybe that's just me.
  • The New Horizons probe headed to Pluto is spin-stablized during the "sleep" period of its journey. Thus, I wonder if it can help test this anomoly.

"An idealist is one who, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes that it will also make better soup." - H.L. Mencken

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