J
Jamie M
Guest
On 3/18/2015 5:44 AM, Martin Brown wrote:
"Titius-Bode law predicts billions of potentially habitable planets in
Milky Way"
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/life-milky-way-titius-bode-law-predicts-billions-habitable-planets-among-stars-1492342
from the page:
"
Using an updated version of the 250-year-old Titius-Bode law,
researchers from the Australian National University and the Niels Bohr
Institute in Copenhagen worked out the probability of the number of
stars in the Milky Way that have planets in the habitable zone (where
there is the potential for liquid water, and therefore life).
....
Steffen Kjćr Jacobsen explained: "We decided to use this method to
calculate the potential planetary positions in 151 planetary systems,
where the Kepler satellite had found between three and six planets. In
124 of the planetary systems, the Titius-Bode law fit with the position
of the planets.
"
Interesting they are predicting where to look for more planets!
cheers,
Jamie
On 18/03/2015 11:55, Phil Hobbs wrote:
Umpteen years ago, (BC, that is Before Computers) an N-body system
was insoluble where n>=3.
Nope, not so. Three-body _orbits_ are insoluble
_in_closed_form_in_terms_of_elementary_functions.
That's a far weaker statement. Even a Keplerian orbit needs elliptic
integrals in general, and of
course even sines and cosines are transcendental functions that can't
be computed exactly except for special values.
It was hard lines on the poor computors who had to do the calculations
back in the days when it was all pencil paper and log tables.
Perturbation theory was finding new planets by the disturbance in the
orbits of other planets in the 18th Century.
It doesn't need to be exact, it just needs to be good enough.
Challis would have beaten Le Verrier and Galle to finding Neptune if he
had trusted the calculations given to him by Adams. It is known that
Galileo actually observed Neptune in the same field as Jupiter in 1612
and noted it moved but didn't see the importance at the time.
Nice history of who saw what and when online at St Andrews astronomy.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/Neptune_and_Pluto.html
It is an interesting aside that although our solar system appears to be
as regular as clockwork a proof of its long term stability is still an
unsolved problem and very little progress has been made on Ovenden's
conjecture which is the most plausible theory underpinning "Bode's law".
(which is in fact a misnamed crude heuristic)
"Titius-Bode law predicts billions of potentially habitable planets in
Milky Way"
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/life-milky-way-titius-bode-law-predicts-billions-habitable-planets-among-stars-1492342
from the page:
"
Using an updated version of the 250-year-old Titius-Bode law,
researchers from the Australian National University and the Niels Bohr
Institute in Copenhagen worked out the probability of the number of
stars in the Milky Way that have planets in the habitable zone (where
there is the potential for liquid water, and therefore life).
....
Steffen Kjćr Jacobsen explained: "We decided to use this method to
calculate the potential planetary positions in 151 planetary systems,
where the Kepler satellite had found between three and six planets. In
124 of the planetary systems, the Titius-Bode law fit with the position
of the planets.
"
Interesting they are predicting where to look for more planets!
cheers,
Jamie