On May 3, 2007, at 2:35 AM, Michel Jullian wrote:

Hi Horace,

I don't deny that gravimagnetism exists (it's an obvious consequence of gravity propagating at a finite speed, if the term means what I think it means i.e. the gravitational Lorentz force) but when you say "the ambient gravimagnetic field in the vicinity of Earth required to account for the precession of the Earth", are you suggesting the observed precession rate is not, or not entirely, accounted for by the official explanation that this precession is due to the gravitational torque exerted by the Sun on the Earth's equatorial bulge?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precession_of_the_equinoxes#Explanation

The official theory works nicely though, I remember I had to derive the precession rate as a physics exercise when I was a student many years ago, assuming the Earth was an homogeneous ellipsoid of the right dimensions, and it came out strikingly close to observations.

Regards,
Michel

Michel,

I very much appreciate your comments. I decided to pull all the ambient field stuff from the article at:

http://mtaonline.net/~hheffner/FullGravimag.pdf

If I can find any other basis for calculating an ambient field value I'll take a crack at it.

Regards,

Horace Heffner

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