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Phil Hobbs
Guest
On 3/16/2015 6:57 PM, jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:
The original statement of the problem is that the masses are fixed.
That's an easy problem.
Once you let them go, it becomes far harder.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
160 North State Road #203
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510
hobbs at electrooptical dot net
http://electrooptical.net
"Could you give an example for a couple masses in 3D or 2D space
for how to do this analytically? "
I made a crude drawing :
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/29948706/grav01.jpg
1 is with two bodies acting equally on a body centered between their
relative masses. Doe snot have to be equal masses or equal distances
but the are reciprocal. More mass requires more distance.
2 is with three bodies acting, but all on one plne. That is in 2D.
There could be an infinite number of bodies there as lond as they are
all on the same orbital plane. This would be PFR (Pretty Fucking
Rare)
3 is even more rare. The arrows top and bottom illustrate that the
ONLY way to do this in 3 dimensions is for the whole system to be
spinning. Otherwise the masses acting on the body in the middle will
collide due to their own gravitation toward each other.
Now, this does not mean you have a stable systme here. The way
gravity works, that object in the middle moves just a hair and that
gravitational effect is no longer equal and is higher from the object
toward which it has moved.
This is positive feedback in a DC system. Once it crashes it crashes.
No such system is likely to exist in the univers but them again it
culd3. I ust think that sooner or later, even if by external forces,
it will not be sustainable. Even without external forces for this to
sustain it would have to be so precisely balanced it ain't funny. You
want to run it forever that way ?? Then there is no room for error
whatsoever. And I mean NONE. Because onbe little iota of a cunt hair
osf a quark of an electron of even a thought will throw it off.
Remember we are not talking the quarterly report, we are talking
forever.
Maybe my input here is not worth a shit, but really to gwt
gravitational forces equal is not easy nor likely. If you are talking
in a theoretical space like in mathematics maybe, but in the real
uivers, of all the kagillions of galaxies and stars, I give it about
50/50 of such a system existing. The variables are piled up against
it.
The original statement of the problem is that the masses are fixed.
That's an easy problem.
Once you let them go, it becomes far harder.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
160 North State Road #203
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510
hobbs at electrooptical dot net
http://electrooptical.net