Article: <[email protected]>
From: [email protected](Nancy )
Subject: Re: PERTURBATIONS - the Zetas Explain
Date: 6 Feb 1997 14:37:31 GMT
In article <[email protected]> Kent Nickerson
writes:
> Nancy, I've rebutted your geometric arguments in my posts
> a few weeks ago. They are there for anybody to look up.
> Even after all this time, I've nothing to add to them.
> Kent Nickerson <[email protected]>
I went back and located the argument Kent referred to, which the Zetas argued was a description, not an explanation, not did it address the geometric argument the Zetas laid out on sci.astro. Below, what Kent claims is a rebuttal, and further below, the what the Zetas pointed to. Kent DID NOT address the issue.
In article <[email protected]> on
January 1, 1997 Kent Nickerson writes:
> WHY WE WORSHIP NEWTON:
> These TWO POSTULATES give rise to Kepler's Laws
> (confirmed without exception) of planetary motion, as well
> as the painstakingly confirmed classical physics of objects
on
> Earth. Example: radial acceleration of body in circular
> orbit = v*v/r (according to calculus). Therefore,
gravitational
> force on body F=ma also equals GMm/(r*r). This gives
> observed relations between orbit speed, period, distance and
> masses. No problem.
> [email protected] (Kent Nickerson)
In article <[email protected]> on December 20, 1996
Kent Nickerson writes:
> An object in orbit around a body will want to continue on a
> tangent to the orbit (inertia), but will fall (gravitation)
toward
> the object it orbits. An orbit has a tangent path which
recedes
> from the orbited body as fast as the orbited body pulls the
orbiter
> towards itself (an equilibrium between inertia and
gravitiational
> attraction). It's like the orbiter is falling all the time,
but the
> surface of the orbited body is receding just as fast (for a
> circular orbit).
> Kent Nickerson <[email protected]>
(Begin REPEAT of ZetaTalk[TM] on Perturbations)
The gravity tug is not strictly a sideways tug, as in all cases
the planet's path is pointed AWAY from the sun, however slightly.
For any given instant moment:
(End REPEAT of ZetaTalk[TM] on Perturbations)