Can hear the distant roar of cognitive dissonance?  ;-)

Cheers

Frank


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NEWTON'S CHERISHED CONSTANT MAY NOT BE
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>From the Science & Technology Desk
Published 5/6/2002 1:15 PM

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 6 (UPI) -- A Russian physicist at 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology has announced 
experimental data that may topple one of science's most 
cherished dogmas -- that Newton's gravitational constant, 
famously symbolized by a large "G," remains constant wherever, 
whenever and however it is measured.

"My colleagues and I have successfully experimentally 
demonstrated that the force of gravitation between two test 
bodies varies with their orientation in space, relative to a 
system of distant stars," Mikhail Gershteyn, a visiting 
scientist at the MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center, told 
United Press International from Cambridge, Mass..

Isaac Newton first described G in 1687 as a fundamental 
component of his universal law of gravity. Two masses, Newton 
wrote, attract each other with a force proportional to their 
mass that falls off rapidly as the bodies move farther and 
farther apart. Albert Einstein later used G in his own field 
equations that fine-tuned Newton's original laws. In Einstein's 
universe, gravity is the effect on bodies moving through space 
that is curved or warped by the presence of matter.

The constant G describes gravity's attractive force precisely 
and appears in equations for any gravitational field, whether 
the field is between planets, stars, galaxies, microscopic 
particles or rays of light. Centuries of measurement have 
firmly fixed the value of G as the complex formula 6.673 times 
10 to the minus 11th power, times meters traveled per second 
times the number of kilograms, squared.

Gravity is a relatively very weak force, yet it is strong 
enough to hold planets in orbit and to mash great gobs of 
matter into incredibly dense, infinitesimally small black 
holes.

If G varies under any circumstances, scientists would have to 
rewrite virtually every physical law, including a long-accepted 
feature of the universe -- isotropy, or the condition that a 
body's physical properties are independent of its orientation 
in space.

The idea that forces on bodies may vary relative to the 
orientation of distant stars has a powerful historical 
precedent in "Mach's Principle," a term Einstein coined in 1918 
for the theory that eventually led him to his biggest 
breakthrough -- general relativity. 

Swing a bucket of water at the end of rope and centrifugal 
forces pull it up and away. These forces result from the 
combined gravitational pull of all the distant stars and 
planets, Austrian physicist Ernst Mach wrote. Therefore any 
change in the orientation of heavenly bodies would affect 
forces on matter everywhere, so powerful is their combined 
effect. The idea that Newton's G may change relative to the 
rest of the universe is an example of Mach's adage -- matter 
out there affects forces right here.

Gershteyn said his experiments show Newton's G "changes with 
the orientation of test masses by at least 0.054 percent." This 
remarkable and unprecedented finding has landed his paper on 
the subject in the June issue of the international journal 
Gravitation and Cosmology. 

"The fact that G varies depending on orientation of the two 
gravitating bodies relative to a system of fixed stars is a 
direct challenge to Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation," 
Gershteyn told UPI. "The existence of such an effect requires a 
radically new theory of gravitation, because the magnitude of 
this effect dwarfs any of Einstein's corrections to Newtonian 
gravity."

"Gershteyn and his coworkers lay an extraordinary and very 
interesting claim which -- if proven true -- would change our 
view of the universe," Lev Tsimring, a research physicist with 
the Institute for Nonlinear Science at the University of 
California San Diego, told UPI. "In a well-controlled 
experiment, the authors proposed to measure the gravitational 
force between two bodies with respect to the orientation of the 
experimental setup to distant stars," Tsimring explained. The 
experiment, he said, would seek to detect gravitational 
anisotropy -- the condition that the attractive force between 
bodies would vary with respect to their spatial orientation, 
not their separating distance. 

"The latest paper by the authors -- in collaboration with an 
experimentalist who is a well-respected specialist in precisely 
that kind of measurement -- provides strong evidence in favor 
of the validity of the author's original claim," Tsimring said.

Gravitation and Cosmology Editor Kirill Bronnikov agreed.

"The evident merit of the paper by Mikhail Gershteyn et. al. is 
the information of a possible new effect, discovered 
experimentally -- the effect of anisotropy related to Newton's 
constant G," Bronnikov told UPI from Moscow. "So far the 
possibility of such an effect has only been discussed 
theoretically."

"The authors of this paper make some extraordinary claims in a 
legitimate journal," George Spagna, chairman of the physics 
department at Randolph-Macon College, told UPI from Ashland, 
Va. "But they do not provide enough of their data or 
theoretical justification. They must provide much more 
information to be convincing."

Other scientists will need to provide "more detailed and 
independent experiments to confirm and elaborate the 
experimental results obtained in Gershteyn's paper," Lev 
Tsimring told UPI. "I cannot exclude that there might be other 
ways of explaining this anisotropy within conventional theory, 
but I believe that Gershteyn's results are convincing."

(Reported by UPI Science Correspondent Mike Martin in Columbia,
 Mo.)

Copyright � 2002 United Press International
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