Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Simon Shack's (Tycho Brahe-inspired) geoaxial binary system. Discuss the book and website for the most accurate configuration of our solar system ever devised - which soundly puts to rest the geometrically impossible Copernican-Keplerian model.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by simonshack »

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ESA'S "EXPLANATIONS" FOR THE OBSERVED NEGATIVE (OR ZERO) PARALLAXES


A Swedish veteran astronomer, Paul, who has been vigorously "attacking" the TYCHOS model (over an e-mail group discussion) for the last year or so, has agreed that NEGATIVE parallaxes (within the Copernican model) are obviously unphysical and thus, could not exist. As far as I can gather, Paul contends that the reason for ESA's largest stellar parallax catalogue (named "Tycho") containing 25% of NEGATIVE parallaxes, 50% of ZERO parallaxes and 25% of POSITIVE parallaxes is thus explained : those unphysical NEGATIVES (and ZERO) values are nothing but observational errors caused by a series of problems that plagued ESA's "Hipparcos satellite", back in the 1990's. According to Paul, ESA's latest "Gaia satellite" has now resolved these problems. Well, this does not seem to be the case - for the ongoing Gaia data collection keeps yielding NEGATIVE stellar parallaxes.

Let's first take a look at a few introductory statements from this tutorial paper released in April 2018 and titled "GAIA Data release 2" :

Introduction
The Gaia Data Release 2 (Gaia DR2; Gaia Collaboration 2018) provides precise positions, proper motions, and parallaxes for an unprecedented number of objects (more than 1.3 billion).


Critical review of the traditional use of parallaxes
"We start this section by briefly describing how parallaxes are measured and how the presence of measurement noise leads to the occurrence of
zero and negative observed parallaxes."

Using Gaia astrometric data: how to proceed?
"The fundamental quantity sought when measuring a stellar parallax is the distance to the star in question. However, as discussed in the previous sections the quantity of interest has a non-linear relation to the measurement, r = 1∕ϖTrue, and is constrained to be positive, while the measured parallax
can be zero or even negative."

I have made a screenshot of a section (titled "SAMPLE TRUNCATION") of that 'GAIA Data release' paper which starts by stating that negative parallaxes are a natural result of the Gaia measurement process (!) and proceeds to "explain" why negative parallaxes (in spite of being "meaningless" and "unphysical") should, basically, be retained - as opposed to "truncated" - so as to prevent introducing undesirable bias in the analysis of any given sample of the Gaia stellar parallax data:

Image

The paper even contains a diagram which illustrates an "Example of a negative parallax arising from the astrometric data processing" :

Image
CAPTION: "Example of a negative parallax arising from the astrometric data processing. Solid blue lines, true path of the object; red dots, the individual measurements of the source position on the sky; dashed orange lines, the source path according to the least-squares astrometric solution, which here features a negative parallax. Left: path on the sky showing the effect of proper motion (linear trend) and parallax (loops). Right: right ascension and declination of the source as a function of time. In the fitted solution the negative parallax effect is equivalent to a yearly motion of the star in the opposite direction of the true parallactic motion (which gives a phase-shift of π in the sinusoidal curves in the right panels). The error bars indicate a measurement uncertainty of 0.7 mas, the uncertainties on Δα* and Δ δ are assumed to be uncorrelated."

In conclusion, "NEGATIVE" stellar parallax measurements are here to stay - and are certainly not going away. -_-
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by Seneca »

Can you explain how you calculated the percentage of 31,25% in your earlier post?

Image

I tried to calculate it based on my understanding of your model and came up with a number that is a little bit smaller, 29,02%.
Here is an explanation for the people who didn't understand the image that I reposted. In the Copernican model, parallax can only be caused by the displacement of the earth because of the motion of earth around the sun in 6 months. In TYCHOS there are 2 motions: 1)the motion of an observer because of the rotation of the earth around its axis, and 2) the PVP motion. Depending on where and when the observations are made, these motions can be in the same direction or in the opposite direction. This creates a trochoidal path as is mentioned. The maximum displacement would be when these 2 displacements are in the same direction as is shown in the image above for the March 2000 > Sept 2000 time interval. The maximum displacement because of the earth's rotation for an observer is equal to the diameter of the earth (in the case that the observer is at the equator)= 12.756 km. The displacement because of the PVP orbit in half a year is 7.017,92 km. Combined this gives a maximum of 19.773,92 km.
The maximum displacement in the other direction would be when both movements are in opposite direction as is shown in the image for the Sept 2000 > March 2001 time interval: the resultant displacement is 12.756 km minus 7.017,92 km which equals 5738.08 km, which is 29.02% of the other maximum. The farther an observer is from the equator, the smaller both distances become because the displacement caused by rotation diminishes toward zero at the poles.

Added: If my calculations are correct, the TYCHOS predicts that no negative parallaxes can be measured from a location with a latitude above 56.6 °. Because for those locations the displacement due to rotation is no longer big enough to compensate for the displacement caused by the PVP motion. This includes parts of Schotland, Danmark, Sweden, Russia and Canada, also Iceland, Norway, Finland, Estland...
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by simonshack »

Seneca wrote:Can you explain how you calculated the percentage of 31,25% in your earlier post?
Dear Seneca, you are quite right, the correct percentage should be more like 29%. I now realize that (at the wee hours of) the other night, I just measured the pixels from an older / earlier graphic of mine which turns out not to be quite accurate. So thanks for the heads up ! :-)
Seneca wrote:Added: If my calculations are correct, the TYCHOS predicts that no negative parallaxes can be measured from a location with a latitude above 56.6 °. Because for those locations the displacement due to rotation is no longer big enough to compensate for the displacement caused by the PVP motion. This includes parts of Schotland, Danmark, Sweden, Russia and Canada, also Iceland, Norway, Finland, Estland...
Great catch! That would be a third possible (concurring) reason why relatively few (and small) negative parallaxes were observed by our North European astronomers back in the old days. Poor Tycho Brahe, for instance, would not have had the slightest chance to measure one in his lifetime...
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by Seneca »

simonshack » 15 Oct 2019, 15:04 wrote: Great catch! That would be a third possible (concurring) reason why relatively few (and small) negative parallaxes were observed by our North European astronomers back in the old days. Poor Tycho Brahe, for instance, would not have had the slightest chance to measure one in his lifetime...
Yes that is possible, at his observatory Uraniborg, located on an island between Danmark and Sweden at 55,90° latitude, the biggest negative parallax would be more than 40 times smaller then in other places.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by simonshack »

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VITTORIO GORETTI - astronomer extraordinaire


Dear all,

The other day I promised to translate the best papers by Vitorio Goretti (1939-2016), the Italian astronomer who for several years strongly questioned ESA's stellar parallax data and its blatantly "cherrypicked" nature and shocking inconsistencies. In the meantime, I've realized that Goretti actually did have some good English translations of his work posted on his website. I think that, for now, the below-linked PDF (which I've duly backed up on my own server) will suffice to give the reader a good idea / overview of Goretti's quite astonishing findings:

Research on Red Stars in the Hipparcos Catalogue - by Vittorio Goretti (January 2013)
original PDF source link: http://www.vittoriogoretti-observatory6 ... ch-ok1.pdf

I highly recommend everyone to read the full paper - but for those with limited time on their hands, I have summarized its contents below in a few sentences.

Image

Lest anyone question Goretti's competence and credibility, please know that he was a distinguished and highly-experienced veteran astronomer (who, in his later years, specialized in the Trigonometric Parallax Method) and that his above research was conducted at the richly-equipped LOIANO observatory run by the prestigious Bologna University. From 1997 to 1999 he discovered over 30 minor planets and produced about 20,000 measures of positions of known minor planets (among which a great number of NEA – Near Earth Asteroids), thereby improving their orbital parameters and becoming the most prolific independent Italian observer during that period. He also discovered over 32 new asteroids, one of which now bears his name.


SUMMARY OF VITTORIO GORETTI'S FINDINGS

Goretti conducted rigorous comparisons between the stellar parallaxes listed in the two ESA catalogues : the larger "TYCHO" catalogue containing over 2 million stars - and the "Hipparcos" catalogue (the most accurate one, according to ESA) containing only about 118,000 stars.

- Firstly, to verify the accuracy of his own observations, he measured the parallaxes of a number of well-known stars - (e.g. the Barnard's star and others) and found that they were reasonably in accordance with the ESA catalogues. He was thus satisfied that there was no fundamental /systematic error in his own observations.

- Secondly, he started comparing a large number of lesser-known, or shall we say, "anonymous" stars (let's henceforth call them the "Nameless" stars, since they are only identified, in astronomy circles, by long numbers and letters, e.g "GSC3064855 or "HIP78741"). Here, he found discrepancies ranging between one and two orders of magnitude. That is to say, Goretti's measurements would put those stars between 10X or 100X closer to our Solar System than what ESA's measurements suggest!

- Thirdly, and more importantly still, he found that the PROPORTION of the stars listed in the Hipparcos catalogue were in stark contrast to what is considered by astronomers as an established fact, namely that the VAST MAJORITY of the stars in our skies are so-called Red Dwarfs, whereas a SMALL MINORITY are (very distant) so-called Red Giants or Supergiants. In ESA's Hipparcos catalogue, this proportion (roughly 50,000-to-1) is practically - and quite inexplicably - inverted!

- Fourthly, Goretti's patient and rigorous scrutiny of ESA's far larger TYCHO catalogue concluded that (quote): "About half the average values of the parallax angles in the Tycho Catalogue turn out to be negative!" (Note that when Goretti says "half are negative", he really means to say "half of the stars that exhibit any parallax at all": in actuality, about 50% of the stars in the catalogues show no [zero] parallax at all). Of course, "negative" parallaxes cannot exist under the heliocentric Copernican model - as I have expounded at length in previous posts. On the other hand, under the TYCHOS model's paradigm, they are to be fully expected. In fact, the distribution of the stellar parallaxes to be found in ESA's catalogues (i.e. 25% positive, 25% negative and 50% zero) is just what one would expect in the TYCHOS model.


Last but not least, in the last years of his life, Goretti apparently also made some other discoveries which might be of paramount interest to the TYCHOS model. Here's a short description of the same that we can read at his (now dormant) website:
"Then, in 2013, he gave up his observation work for family reasons. His last work was in collaboration with Mauro Amoretti and Silvano Casulli, two colleagues of his respectively in Sanremo and Guidonia. They were carrying out research into eclipsing binary stars (Algol-type). The light curves and the measurements of the distances of some eclipsing binary systems (two stars at a great distance according to the Hipparcos Catalogue, but a white dwarf and a planet according to Goretti’s team), show for those systems a different reality.

One example among many open questions: AL Gem (GSC 1356 206) is two stars with a parallax angle of (12 ± ± 24) mas and a distance unknown but certainly high (as Hipparcos says) or is it a white dwarf
and a planet with a parallax angle of (380 ± 40) milliarcseconds and a distance of (8.6 ± 0.9) light years (as found by Goretti)?" http://www.vittoriogoretti-observatory6 ... lum-vitae/
In other words, ladies & gents...

In the last years of his life, Goretti was observing binary stars and concluding that one of the two (the companion) was NOT a star, but a "planet"!

Of course, in the TYCHOS model, the binary companion of our closest star (the Sun) is a reddish/orange body known as "Mars" : is it a "planet", as we've always called it... or is it perhaps an old, cooling "Red Dwarf"? To be sure, Mars is the one-and-only reddish/orange body in our entire Solar System.

Image
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by simonshack »

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BARNARD'S STAR MOTION CONFIRMS THE TYCHOS MODEL

Barnard's star is famed for being the fastest-moving star in our skies : as seen from the Northern Hemisphere,
it is observed to briskly "ascend up and up in our skies", by as much as 10.36" (arcseconds) every year.

MOTION OF BARNARD'S STAR BETWEEN 1985 AND 2005
Image
source: http://cseligman.com/text/stars/propermotion.htm

An experienced amateur astronomer, Dennis Di Cicco, is known for having patiently and most accurately photographed this rapidly-moving star between 1994 and 1995 - and to have plotted a diagram of his observations.

"Has an amateur astronomer measured a stellar parallax?" : https://www.quora.com/Has-an-amateur-as ... r-parallax

At the above-linked Quora page, we may find Di Cicco's diagram plotting the Barnard's star "upward-rising path" in our skies. As we can see, this path exhibits a sinusoidal wobble (oscillating "from left-to-right") - which in fact represents the star's parallactic oscillation. I have highlighted this "wobble" on Di Cicco's diagram with pink and blue colors - so as to show how these two assymetrical "phases" represent, respectively, 8months and 4months of this parallactic oscillation:

Image

Before proceeding, I will now have to remind the reader about a graphic of mine featured in my TYCHOS book titled "A MAN'S YEARLY PATH". It plots the trajectory that any given point on Earth (or an observational astronomer in his observatory) will trace during the course of a year under the TYCHOS model's paradigm - with Earth rotating once every 24 hours and slowly advancing at 1.6km/h (or only 1mph!). Please understand that the trochoidal path in this diagram is meant to depict a "timelapse trail" (or the successive positions) of, say, an astronomer snapping a picture of a given star every single night at midnight - during the course of a full year:

Image

This neatly goes to explain, for instance, why star VEGA (located high above our heads in the Northern Hemisphere) is observed to move around this trochoidal loop that, in practice, causes every earthly observer to alternately "move forwards or backwards" (by 8months and 4months respectively -in the course of a year) in relation to our surrounding universe. (I have highlighted in pink and blue the prograde & retrograde "phases" (of respectively 8months versus 4months) of this motion :

Image
source of original diagram: http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys301/le ... allax.html

Now, the Barnard's star is not located above our heads - but at a mere +04°41 in declination (i.e. roughly "level" with Earth's equator, if we consider an annual average of Earth's 23.5° inclination). Its path will therefore not exhibit a trochoidal loop (such as star VEGA) as viewed from Earth - but a sinusoidal one. In reality, of course, the Barnard's star does not truly / physically zigzag in such manner as it travels across space - this is just the (fully expected) consequence of our annual trochoidal motion. In my next diagram, we can see how Di Cicco's diagram is a perfect match with the expected 8-month / 4-month oscillation predicted by the TYCHOS model :

Image

And here is how (a screenshot of) the wondrous TYCHOSIUM simulator can further illustrate / visualize the Barnard's star's observed motion :

Image

In conclusion, it is the oscillating frame of reference (8months "prograde" versus 4months "retrograde") of any earthly observer that causes the apparent "decelerations" and "accelerations" of our surrounding planets and stars. Kepler had it the other way round: he thought it was the planets and stars that (somehow?) physically "accelerated" and "decelerated". It is up for everyone to judge for themselves which of these two assumptions is the most rational and sensible one.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by Peaker »

Hello All,

Would it be possible to plot a mirror image on our globe of ‘the yearly path of man’ so that trochoidal loop could be neutralised?

Once this negative/neutralising loop was conceived it would be a matter of having a team of observers(volunteers) in their allocated positions to take readings in the appropriate order and on the right day.

The observed retrograde motion would be affected, changed somewhat but in a predictable way.

The path would not need to be complete but just have the bare minimum of data points. True?

I imagine this would act as a proof. Am I right?
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by Peaker »

Hello Patrix,

Some thoughts on testing The Tychos' explanation of the length of Retrograde Periods.

Would it be possible to build into the Tychosium a camera view which uses 'A Man's Yearly Journey' to recreate the accurate passage in time of the Retrograde Periods?

And while I think of it, is there any planetarium program which models Retrograde Motion using the Copernican System?

Regards,
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by patrix »

Peaker,

I have put a lot of time into Tychosium but I have spent most of the time on necessities that Simon uses to adjust it so that it agrees with actual observations.

The next phase is to improve the visuals so that the motions of the Solar system can be viewed from an earthly perspective. There are no technical problems with doing this. A proof of concept already exists (look under camera) but I haven't had time to make it usable yet.

Your idea is great Peaker. It can be done by being able to step exactly one year down to the second and from an earth camera a man's yearly path would then be demonstrated.

I know of no program that models the retrogrades from a verifiable Copernican model. It should of course be possible using a standard 3D framework as in Tychosium, but it isn't which says a lot. The Copernican model is actually debunkable using basic geometry.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by simonshack »

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ABOUT THE MANY ATTEMPTS TO MEASURE EARTH'S ORBITAL SPEED
and how they support Earth's velocity of 1.6km/h - as of the TYCHOS model



Dear friends, let me start this short "essay" by quoting a few lines from the Epilogue of my TYCHOS book :
"Countless experiments were being feverishly carried out, one more intricate than the other, yet all of them shared the same objective: to scientifically verify and establish beyond reasonable doubt that Earth was hurtling around space at the staggering, hypersonic speed of 107.000+ km/h as contended by the Copernican, heliocentric theory. It was a most extraordinary claim yet, one that had to be scientifically verified. Failure was not an option for its illustrious proponents.

Yet today, the most infamous experiment of them all — the Michelson-Morley interferometer study — is billed as the “greatest failed scientific experiment of all time”. Mind you, it really doesn’t deserve to be singled out for having fallen short of proving Copernicus right; it is a matter of historical record that the totality of numerous other similar experiments — embarrassingly enough — utterly and completely failed to prove Earth’s purported, hypersonic orbital motion around the Sun. Despite designs to prove heliocentrism, experimental data continued to tell us what we refused to hear."

That's right: it is a HARD FACT that none of the countless experiments carried out to verify Earth's supposed orbital speed of 107.226 km/h (or ca. 30Km/s - or about 90X the SPEED OF SOUND!) has been able to verify this most extraordinary claim. I personally have a problem with that - but maybe it's just me?

As most will know, it was Albert Einstein who - once more - was called upon to come to the rescue of the crumbling heliocentric theory - and to "save the appearances". On this occasion, Einstein simply decreed that "the ether does not exist!" - and that - "the speed of light is constant independently of the observer" - and that - "therefore the orbital speed of Earth is undetectable and immeasurable." (not exactly his words - but allow me to simplify things a little, in the interest of brevity).

Allow me now to fast-forward to a most fascinating French paper authored in 2007 by Pierre Fuerxer, titled: "Les expériences optiques et la relativité."

Pierre Fuerxer is the current 'caretaker' of the French website dedicated to the great physicist-cum-economist (and anti-globalist) Maurice Allais (1911-2010). Aside from his 1988 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, Allais is famed for having falsified Einstein's theory of relativity - in a manner that can hardly be disproved. He did so by performing a profound examination of the vast body of work of Dayton Miller, the man who not only perfected Michelson's interferometer (the ingenuous apparatus used to try and measure Earth's orbital speed) - but also performed the most extensive, rigorous and longlasting interferometry experiments of all times. In short, what Maurice Allais determined was that Dayton Miller's findings could not be dismissed (as they ultimately WERE!) as "insignificant" - due to their overall / statistical coherence (the nature of which can only be grasped if you spend some time reading the most rational and level-headed writings of Maurice Allais).

To be sure, Einstein himself was extremely worried about Dayton Miller's findings - and is quoted as saying that...

“If Dr. Miller’s results should be confirmed, then the special relativity theory, and with it the general theory in its present form, fails. Experiment is the supreme judge. Only the equivalence of inertia and weight remain, which would lead to an essentially different theory.” (Albert Einstein)

Image Dr. DAYTON C. MILLER

Image
Source: http://www.fondationmauriceallais.org/t ... s/?lang=en

Now, as I have highlighted in the above screenshot, Dayton Miller was seeing "diurnal variations in the speed of light of an amplitude of about 8km/h".

Well, this "8km/h" variation of the speed of light immediately caught my attention. Could his calculations possibly be "off" by one decimal? According to the TYCHOS model (and as I have previously mentioned), it is to be expected that acute and well-equipped earthly observers / astronomers (who all travel at 1.6km/h across space) will detect a + or- 0.8km/h "velocity variation coefficient".

This was expounded and illustrated in a graphic that I made a few months ago (showing why our Moon does in fact exhibit this +/- 0.8km/h "velocity variation"):

Image viewtopic.php?p=2412338#p2412338



Now, as I reached the end of the above-mentioned 2007 paper by Pierre Fuerxer ( "Les expériences optiques et la relativité." ), here's what I learned (to my delight) :

"Tous les interféromètres de Michelson dont le schéma optique est celui de l’interféromètre initial ont donné des résultats comparables."

In other (English) words, most of all of the Michelson-type experiments using the optical scheme of his original interferometer have yielded comparable results.

Image


The results of MOST of the various Michelson-type experiments performed over the years have showed a speed-of-light variation of around 8X10-10, whereas two other particularly accurate experiments (by Roy Kennedy and Esclangon) had this value at a marginally smaller 7X10-10. All in all, they all pretty much agreed with each other. This flies straight in the face of the "widely-accepted" notion that the many interferometer experiments yielded "null" results!

To clarify, 8X10-10 (in 'scientific annotation') simply means 0.0000000008 (of the speed of light)
And 7X10-10 (in 'scientific annotation') simply means 0.0000000007 (of the speed of light)

For the sake of the following calculus, let me just use the figure of 0.00000000075 (which is the mean/ average between 0.0000000008 and 0.0000000007). OK?

So here we go:

Speed of light: 299,792.5 km/s

299,792.5 km/s X 0.00000000075 = 0.000224844 km/s

Now, we want to convert km/s to km/h, (there are 3600 seconds in one hour), so :

0.000224844 X 3600 = 0.809439 km/h (much like my 0.8 km/h "velocity variation coefficient" as illustrated in my above Moon graphic)

And of course, 0.809439 km/h X 2 = 1.6188 km/h

I rest my case, ladies & gents. Earth moves at about 1.6km/h - and most of all interferometer experiments have already (unwittingly) proved it !


******************************************************
If you think about it, it all makes perfect sense: since Earth only moves at 1.6km/h (covering only 7018km every six months and 14,036km annually), we can now understand just why it has been so incredibly difficult to detect its relative orbital speed - as well as any stellar parallaxes. As it is, almost ALL astronomy debates and vivid controversies over the last few centuries have been revolving around some MINUSCULE / MICROSCOPIC variations and / or minor "inequalities"... It's time for us earthlings to stop arguing about petty matters. We all need to get up to speed (pun intended) about the wonderful slowness and tranquil spatial motion of our lovely planet - and to start enjoying it... As I see it, there would be no life on Earth without this blissful slowness - would you agree? -_-

As I like to say, the TYCHOS is here to stay.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by nokidding »

Dear Simon, The rotational speed of a man on the equator is 1662 km/hr. (Pi x12799/24). This would give a half diurnal (12hr) variation in the speed of light of plus / minus 1662 Km/hr (if Relativity doesn't hold).

If you wanted to check the PVP orbital speed you would compare the variation obtained with the interferometer pointed at 90 degrees to the direction of PVP travel with the result obtained with the instrument pointed in the direction of travel. (6 hr difference)

I looked on wikipedia at how the interferometer works, but not at all sure how you would set this up, perhaps I have missed the point entirely. Thank you for most interesting post.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by patrix »

Absolutely amazing and historical Simon. Imagine if we could get people in posession of an inferometer interested so that some controlled experiments could be carried out that was specifically designed to test the Tychos. No enormous telescopes that can measure the microscopic star parallaxes needed.

Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't Earth's rotational speed cancelled or taken into account in these measurements? Which means that when a measurement is taken when Earths rotation is in the same direction as the PVP-orbit then that speed will be 1.5 and 12 hours later it will be -1.5, and 1 in this case is 1.6 km/h as predicted by Tychos.
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by simonshack »

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Dear Nokidding and Patrix,

I shall try my best to answer your questions - but first we need to keep in mind what follows:

There is (and there has always been) an underlying confusion as to WHAT EXACTLY the various velocity values collected throughout the many and various interferometer experiments truly represented. However, there is little or no ambiguity as to what those different experiments expressly SET OUT to detect.

For instance, the original Michelson-Morley experiment (of 1887) expressly set out to detect the "absolute speed of Earth through space" - whereas the Michelson-Gale-Pearson experiment (of 1925) expressly set out to determine Earth's rotational speed (or "angular velocity"). The former was deemed a failure ("null result") - whereas the latter was deemed a success (much like Sagnac's experiment which also firmly detected and confirmed Earth's rotation around its axis).

Now, I'm still on a (steep) learning curve to try and understand just how those different interferometers worked - and just how their operators translated their observational data into spatial velocity values - so please don't ask me to clarify all of that for you just yet!... Nonetheless, I find it most interesting to attempt my own "readings" of the published velocity values - as viewed under the TYCHOS paradigm and consequent "reduction factors". In any event, if the TYCHOS model is correct, we may easily imagine why those great experimenters (e.g. Albert Michelson or Dayton Miller - both "Copernican heliocentrists") ultimately failed to make any sense out of their observations and numerical results. Dogmatic beliefs are some tough hurdles to overcome - even for the brightest scientists...

As mentioned in my above post, it was Dayton Miller who performed the most extensive interferometer experiments of all times - ostensibly meant to measure Earth's orbital speed. However, Miller found this speed to be (inexplicably) somewhere between 9 and 10 km/s, instead of the "Copernically-expected" 30 km/s. Thus, he concluded that what his interferometer had measured was NOT actually Earth's orbital speed, but rather the "ether drift as measurable from Earth"... Unsurprisingly perhaps, Miller's findings were eventually deemed to be "spurious" / or "caused by random temperature issues" / or simply "insignificant" - and so on and so forth. (In any event, they certainly did NOT yield "null" results - as most astronomy literature claims !)

Yet many years later, Maurice Allais decided to perform a statistical examination of Dayton Miller's data and demonstrated that the sheer coherence and consistency of Miller's vast body of observations was such that it couldn't possibly be dismissed as any sort of "spurious happenstance". In short, Miller's data showed that there was a most regular DIURNAL dissymmetry between civil time (aka solar time) and sidereal time - and that this dissymmetry also manifested itself over a six-month-period sinusoidal curve (peaking at the March 21 and September 21 equinoxes). In fact, Maurice Allais' analysis of Miller's data still stands today as one of the strongest disprovals of Einstein's wiggly theories (remember how he first stated that the "ether doesn't exist" - and then had to retract this embarrassing blooper...)

You may now ask, "so what exactly did Miller measure? What did that 9 or 10 Km/s velocity that he calculated actually represent?"

Well, dear friends (and TYCHOS readers), allow me to "cautiously speculate" about that. As you know, the TYCHOS stipulates that the stars are 42633X closer to us than currently believed. Most likely, Dayton Miller compared his solar vs sidereal data and computed his velocity figures under the standard heliocentric model paradigm. So let's use his averaged 9 and 10km/s figures (i.e. 9.5 km/s) to perform this simple reduction :

We shall first convert 9.5km/s to km/h : 9.5 X 3600 = 34200 km/h

Let's now divide 34200 by 42633:

34200 km/h / 42633 = 0.802 km/h

Once more (and as expounded in my above post) we obtain the TYCHOS "velocity variation coefficient" of circa +/- 0.8 km/h !

Dear friends: Earth moves at 1.6km/h - in my honest and humble opinion. Enjoy the smooth ride, day after day. :)
Kham
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by Kham »

Simon,

Just loved you used the data from Dayton Miller to once again show how another scientists’ work shows us all how The TYCHOS is universal. I continue to be amazed and exhilarated by The TYCHOS. Simply extraordinary!

Take care,

Kham
patrix
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Re: Testing the TYCHOS - stellar parallax and all

Unread post by patrix »

As for the interferometer research that opens up a new chapter of the TYCHOS (Great work Simon!) I think of an experiment that hopefully can be carried out soon by someone in possession an interferometer:

The TYCHOS claims that Earth is rotating diurnally at 1600kph and at the same time traveling along the PVP-orbit at 1.6 kph

Thus when Earths rotation is in the same direction as its orbit, the measured speed of an interferometer should be 1601.6 kph and 12 hours later it should be 1598,4

And as a bonus if this is accepted (that Earth actually moves this way), the problems with the Aether physics and wave theory of light and the speed of light will go away!
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