Difference between revisions of "About the Wang Eclipse, Part 4"
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This article is a response to an article by William Stubbs [1] and another article by Robert Kemp [2] both sent to NPA in 2013. Both articles are commenting on the Wang eclipse [3] observed in China in 1997. The interpretation given here is very different from [1] and [2]. It is demonstrated that a 300 year old theory can explain the observed anomaly. Modern theories cannot do that. | This article is a response to an article by William Stubbs [1] and another article by Robert Kemp [2] both sent to NPA in 2013. Both articles are commenting on the Wang eclipse [3] observed in China in 1997. The interpretation given here is very different from [1] and [2]. It is demonstrated that a 300 year old theory can explain the observed anomaly. Modern theories cannot do that. | ||
− | [[Category:Scientific Paper]] | + | [[Category:Scientific Paper|wang eclipse]] |
[[Category:Gravity]] | [[Category:Gravity]] | ||
[[Category:Aether]] | [[Category:Aether]] |
Revision as of 09:52, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
---|---|
Title | About the Wang Eclipse, Part 4 |
Read in full | Link to paper |
Author(s) | John-Erik Persson |
Keywords | {{{keywords}}} |
Published | 2013 |
Journal | None |
No. of pages | 2 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
This article is a response to an article by William Stubbs [1] and another article by Robert Kemp [2] both sent to NPA in 2013. Both articles are commenting on the Wang eclipse [3] observed in China in 1997. The interpretation given here is very different from [1] and [2]. It is demonstrated that a 300 year old theory can explain the observed anomaly. Modern theories cannot do that.