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/sci/ - Science & Math


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11436976 No.11436976 [Reply] [Original]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flyby_anomaly'

What's causing the flyby anomaly, /sci/?

>> No.11437024

i dont know niggers probably

>> No.11437030
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11437030

>>11436976
>Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name
fuck you op

>> No.11437114

>>11437030
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flyby_anomaly

>> No.11437153

Probably dark matter.

>> No.11437469

>>11436976
Accelerations effect on time passing can cause body is accelerating for longer than predicted.

>> No.11437730

>>11436976
Rounding error at planck length

>> No.11438426

>>11436976
just another unidentified constant we need to create

>> No.11438432

>>11436976
perhaps the craft was slightly off in terms of distance than what they thought and the number is actually completely correct within the theory given the spacecrafts actual position?

>> No.11438434

>>11437469
pi=100

>> No.11438549

>>11436976
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flyby_anomaly
"The analysis of the Juno flyby looked at analysis errors that could potentially mimic the flyby anomaly. They found that a high precision gravity field (at least 50×50 degree/order[clarify]) was needed for accurate flyby predictions. Use of a lower-precision gravity field (10×10 degree/order, sufficient for launch analysis), would yield a 4.5 mm/s velocity error."
So it's chaotic like weather prediction, need disproportional accuracy to get good predictions.