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** 30 document
files in HTML format. These should be viewable with any recent-vintage browser
able to access web sites.
** 13
PowerPoint presentations, which are computer slides with short illustrations or
bullet points describing a specific point or subject. A few have graphics or
animated elements. One is narrated. They are all self-guided. The points they
summarize may be explained in greater depth in the document files with the same
or a similar name. A Power{oint viewer is also included.
Document Files
<21st Century
Gravity.htm> is an overview of the whole subject of gravity, including its "how"
and "why". This is the newest file and serves as a good introduction to the
other files that elaborate specific issues or show how they arose and evolved
over the last decade. See also the PowerPoint file of the same name. Published
under the same title by T. Van Flandern in Meta Research Bulletin 12,
17-29 (2003); and J.Wash.Acad.Sci. 90#3, 108-125 (2004).
<aberration04.html> This is the animation file illustrating the concept of
aberration. See the later file "Propagation delay vs aberration" for a fuller
explanation.
<Does Gravity
Have Inertia.htm> shows that space does not curve even in general relativity
(only "spacetime" does), and that gravity has no force of inertia (because it
obeys the "transparency principle"). It shows the physical meaning of the
time-like "metric" in GR. Published under the same title by T. Van Flandern in
Meta Research Bulletin 11, 49-53 (2002).
<Does the
Universe Have a Speed Limit.htm> is an original overview article appearing first
on this CD that develops several gravity-related concepts to the point of
showing why speeds in the universe are no longer limited to the speed of light.
Table I at the end serves as a table of contents for each of the major points
about gravity, light, or relativity developed within.
<Effect of Solar
Potential on GPS.htm> develops some concepts in general relativity, including
the effect of gravitational potential on clocks. It then addresses the puzzle of
why GPS satellites show the effect of Earth's gravitational potential on their
ticking rates, but not the effect of the Sun's changing gravitational potential
across their orbits. See the related presentation file "Gravitational force vs
Potential".
<GPS&Twins–MRB.htm> A treatise specifically about the famous twins
paradox, treated from the unique perspective of a spacecraft with a GPS clock on
board. It dispels the notion that "acceleration" plays a role in understanding
the paradox and introduces the concept of "time slippage" to explain the
physical meaning of one of the two terms in the Lorentz time transformation, the
other of which describes the change in clock rates.
<Gravitational
waves challenge.htm> is a short summary of why "gravitational waves" cannot be
related to changes in gravitational force, contrary to what some textbooks
claim.
<Gravity
Intro.htm> This file, which summarizes what may be found in the other files.
<Gravity.htm> is
a detailed exposition of a Le Sage-type model for gravitation, the new
properties implied, and a comparison of theory and observations. It was
originally published as "Gravity", T. Van Flandern, a chapter of the book
Pushing Gravity, M. Edwards, ed., Apeiron Press, Montreal, 91-122 (2002).
<GSRL–dok.htm>
is an early (1994) exposition of the differences between what is now called
"Lorentzian relativity" and Einstein's special relativity.
<Kopeikin
experiment – press release response.htm> is a critique of the experiment
involving Jupiter passing nearly in front of a quasar, that purported to measure
the "speed of gravity" as equal to the speed of light. It cites several other
refutations that reach the same conclusion – the experiment does not measure the
speed of gravity – while no other authors support the original interpretation.
From
http://metaresearch.org/media%20and%20links/press/SOG-Kopeikin.asp (2003).
<Lorentz
Contraction.htm> is an article first appearing on this CD that explains the
phenomenon of length contraction in physical terms, and shows why it does not
exist in Lorentzian relativity. To be published by T. Van Flandern in Meta
Research Bulletin 12, (2003).
<LR.htm>
compares Einstein special relativity with Lorentzian relativity, and contains a
primer on the latter.
<Meta Cycle.htm>
is a response to Victor Slabinksi's paper (see "Slabinski-Gravitons"), showing
how to convert some of the constraint equations developed by Slabinski into
numerical upper or lower limits or estimates of parameters. It then shows how
the gravity model fits into a reasonable cosmological context in a universe that
ultimately conserves matter, momentum, and even entropy. Published as "The meta
cycle", T. Van Flandern, Meta Research Bulletin 7, 43-47 (1998).
<Perihelion
Advance Formula follow-up.htm> answers comments on the "Perihelion Advance
Formula" paper by two correspondents. Published as "Follow-up to the perihelion
advance formula", T. Van Flandern, Meta Research Bulletin 8, 24-30
(1999).
<Perihelion
Advance Formula.htm> contains a derivation of the relativistic formula for the
advance of perihelion (rotation of the major axis of elliptical orbits), showing
how the gravitational potential field can also affect the ballistic motion of
material bodies and not just light waves. It derives the correct formula from
one physical mechanism; whereas general relativity's similar formula requires
three mechanisms, one of which subtracts 40% from the effect of the other two. A
testable difference between mechanisms for large-mass binary stars is also
mentioned. Published as "The perihelion advance formula", T. Van Flandern,
Meta Research Bulletin 8, 10-15 (1999).
<Physics has its
Principles.htm> shows the logical basis for all physical reasoning, and how it
differs starkly from reasoning in philosophy or mathematics. Failure to respect
this difference is the primary source of weirdness in modern mainstream
theories. Published under the same title by T. Van Flandern in Gravitation,
Electromagnetism and Cosmology, K. Rudnicki, ed., C. Roy Keys Inc.,
Montreal, 87-101 (2001).
<Possible New
Properties of Gravity.htm> An article published under the same title by T. Van
Flandern, Astrophysics & Space Science 244, 249-261 (1996),
containing early views on how gravity can be explained by a Le Sage-type
"pushing" mechanism, and a comparison of theory and observation.
<Propagation
delay vs aberration.htm> compares and contrasts aberration and propagation
delay, and shows why they are equivalent whether the source or the target body
is regarded as moving. It refers to equivalent animations in a number of
different formats to meet the needs of most kinds of computers.
<Pushing Gravity
book review.htm> provides an overview of the new book Pushing Gravity,
likely to also be of interest to purchasers of this CD.
<Relativity of
Simultaneity in GPS.htm> is an early and fairly technical derivation of the
differences between Lorentzian relativity and special relativity, showing the
advantages of the former.
<Slabinski–gravitons.htm> is V. Slabinski's chapter in Pushing Gravity
(published as “Force, heat and drag in a graviton model”, M. Edwards, ed.,
Apeiron Press, Montreal, 123-128), deriving formulas from first principles for
various actions in a specific Le Sage-type model, and setting numerical
constraints derived in part from the "Meta Cycle" paper.
<Speed of
Gravity – FoPh.htm> is a preprint of the latest, comprehensive paper on the
subject of the "speed of gravity", answering all objections raised to date of a
theoretical or observational nature. The final, co-authored paper was published
under the title “Experimental Repeal of the Speed Limit for Gravitational,
Electrodynamic, and Quantum Field Interactions”, T. Van Flandern and J.P.
Vigier, Foundations of Physics 32(#7), 1031-1068 (2002).
<Speed of
Gravity–What Experiments Say.htm> is a preprint of the original publication in a
journal of record of the experimental evidence for the speed of gravity being
far faster than the speed of light in forward time. See "The speed of gravity –
What the experiments say", T. Van Flandern, Physics Letters A 250,
1-11 (1998).
<SR vs LR –
Physics Today.htm> contains an unpublished letter to Physics Today
magazine critiquing their article by Neil Ashby.
<USENET gravity
debate A.htm> Part A of on-line messages posted to USENET science newsgroups
between 1998 and 2001, mostly debating the speed of gravity issue.
<USENET gravity
debate B.htm> Part B.
<USENET gravity
debate C.htm> Part C.
<USENET gravity
debate D.htm> Part D.
<What GPS tells
us about relativity.htm> explains the experimental history behind the relativity
of motion and how GPS sheds light on the matter in unexpected ways.
Presentation Files
StartUp.ppt –
default starting presentation (3 slides) for computers that can autostart this
CD. Points to "Gravity Intro.htm" for further instructions, and has links to
other presentations on this list.
21st Century
Gravity.ppt – a companion to the document of the same name, illustrating some of
the concepts; subtitled "a deeper understanding of why apples fall from trees".
This is the only narrated presentation.
Cesena
Workshop.ppt – titled "A complete flat-space gravity model consistent with
first-order GR"; an earlier overview of how the pieces of the gravity puzzle fit
together.
Does Space
Curve-Storrs-2003.ppt – addresses two questions: "Does space curve?" and "Does
gravity have inertia?"; answers to both are in the negative.
ESR-LSR.ppt –
titled "The difference between Einstein and Lorentz special relativity for one
GPS satellite"; a mathematical derivation.
Gravitational
Force vs Potential.ppt – titled "The effect of solar gravitational potential on
GPS clocks"; offers a nice overview of experiments showing the differences
between gravitational force and gravitational potential; see also the document
with a similar title.
Interpreting
SR.ppt – titled "Interpreting special relativity (in 4 steps)"; compares the two
models for the relativity of motion.
Relativity
without Einstein.ppt – titled "Implications of relativity without Einstein
synchronization in the GPS"; an overview of relativity and the GPS.
SOG – U of
Maryland.ppt – titled "The speed of gravity – What the experiments say"; a
companion to the document of the same name.
The Relativity
of Motion-NPA.ppt – an overview of special relativity (SR) versus Lorentzian
relativity (LR).
Twins
Paradox.ppt – titled "The twins paradox with GPS clocks"; a companion to the
document about the twins paradox and GPS.
What GPS tells
us about relativity.ppt – titled "What the Global Positioning System (GPS) tells
us about relativity"; part 1 of summary similar to other presentations and
documents.
What GPS tell us
– Part 2.ppt – titled "What affects clock rates?"; part 2 of the summary that
begins in the next presentation.
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