Re: Planet X Cover-Up: Rationale?
Bill Nelson wrote:
> What wobble?
The term wobble is used to explain perturbations between Saturn and
Jupiter, Jupiter and the Sun, Jupiter and its moons, and the influence
of planets in creating a wobble in their stars.
Grubaugh "Synchronous Retrograde Orbit" (preliminary status)
by throopw@sheol.org
In fact, saturn's acceleration due to jupiter is 100 times
less than its acceleration due to the sun. Nevertheless, the
orbit turns out to be quite stable. When N-body simulated
for 1000 simulated-years, jupiter and saturn keep much the
same relationship WRT the sun; the line connecting keeps
pointed at roughly the same direction against the inertial
(fixed stars) background, with very little year-to-year drift
(though with a yearly "wobble" of a bit more than 30 degrees).
The Search for Planets Around Other Stars,
by Andrew Fraknoi,Astronomical Society of the Pacific
For example, the Sun is a thousand times more massive
than Jupiter, so the center of mass of the Sun-Jupiter system
lies very close to the Sun. Nevertheless, an extraterrestrial
observer measuring the Sun's motion through space would
detect a slight wobble in the Sun's path, a wobble with a
period of twelve years, the same time it takes Jupiter to
orbit once around the center of mass.
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001.
Neptune was discovered in 1846 as the result of a
mathematical analysis of the irregularities in the motion of
Uranus, and Pluto, whose existence was predicted from the
perturbations of both Uranus and Neptune, was found in 1930.
... Because stars are so distant and bright and an extrasolar
planet, no matter how large, is relatively small and dim, it
cannot be seen or photographed directly. Its presence is
usually inferred from a periodic wobble in the spectrum of
a target stars frequencies. This wobble, produced by
gravitational influences, causes tiny shifts in the stars
frequencies that are caught by telescopes and analyzed to
yield information on the body affecting the star.
The Discovery of Extrasolar Planets,
by Geoffrey Marcy and R. Paul Butler
For example, Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, has
one-thousandth of the mass of the sun. Therefore, every 11.8
years (Jupiter's period), the sun wobbles in a circle that is
one-thousandth the size of Jupiter's orbit. The mass of Jupiter is
about 318 times the mass of Earth. The other eight planets also
cause the sun to wobble, but by smaller amounts.
Ios Internal Heat Dissipation, a Simplified Mathematical Model,
by Kevin Kaczmarek, Mariah Lyndaker, and Jennifer Ward
But, the gravitational forces from Europa, Ganymede, and
Jupiter add a slight wobble to this directional locking so
that a straight line connecting the two masses does not always
extend to the center of Jupiter (Arnett 1998).