Posted on 12/01/2017 7:24:35 PM PST by BenLurkin
In the early 1960s, scientists developed the gravity-assist method, where a spacecraft would conduct a flyby of a major body in order to increase its speed. Many notable missions have used this technique, including the Pioneer, Voyager, Galileo, Cassini, and New Horizons missions. In the course of many of these flybys, scientists have noted an anomaly where the increase in the spacecrafts speed did not accord with orbital models.
This has come to be known as the flyby anomaly, which has endured despite decades of study and resisted all previous attempts at explanation. To address this, a team of researchers from the University Institute of Multidisciplinary Mathematics at the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia have developed a new orbital model based on the maneuvers conducted by the Juno probe.
The study, which recently appeared online under the title A Possible Flyby Anomaly for Juno at Jupiter, was conducted by Luis Acedo, Pedro Piqueras and Jose A. Morano. Together, they examined the possible causes of the so-called flyby anomaly using the perijove orbit of the Juno probe. Based on Junos many pole-to-pole orbits, they not only determined that it too experienced an anomaly, but offered a possible explanation for this.
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It is a testament to the complexities of physics that even after sixty years of space exploration and one hundred years since General Relativity was first proposed that we are still refining our models. Perhaps someday we will find there are no mysteries left to solve, and the Universe will make perfect sense to us.
(Excerpt) Read more at universetoday.com ...
Juno Finds that Jupiters Gravitational Field is “Askew”
universetoday.com
Posted on 10/27/2017 7:55:03 AM PDT by BenLurkin
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3599166/posts
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