Difference between revisions of "Calculation of So-Called General Relativistic Phenomena by Advancing Newton's Theory of Gravitation, Maintaining Classical Conceptions of Space and Relativity"

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With the example of the motion of  Mercury around the sun it is shown, how Newton's Theory of Gravitation should be advanced by taking into consideration the finite velocity of gravitational expansion and the present concept of transference of forces by particles to be able to calculate so-called general relativistic phenomena, as the additional motion of Mercury's perihelion, the curvation of a light beam at the surface of the sun and the phenomena observed at the binary pulsar PSR 1913+16, maintaining classical conceptions of an Euklidean space and the Galileian principle of relativity.
 
With the example of the motion of  Mercury around the sun it is shown, how Newton's Theory of Gravitation should be advanced by taking into consideration the finite velocity of gravitational expansion and the present concept of transference of forces by particles to be able to calculate so-called general relativistic phenomena, as the additional motion of Mercury's perihelion, the curvation of a light beam at the surface of the sun and the phenomena observed at the binary pulsar PSR 1913+16, maintaining classical conceptions of an Euklidean space and the Galileian principle of relativity.
  
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|calculation so-called general relativistic phenomena advancing newton 's theory gravitation maintaining classical conceptions space relativity]]
  
 
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[[Category:Gravity]]
 
[[Category:Relativity]]
 
[[Category:Relativity]]

Revision as of 10:06, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Calculation of So-Called General Relativistic Phenomena by Advancing Newton\'s Theory of Gravitation, Maintaining Classical Conceptions of Space and Relativity
Read in full Link to paper
Author(s) Reiner Georg Ziefle
Keywords perihelion, Mercury, relativity, GRT, pulsar, PSR 1913+16, gravitation, Paul Gerber, Newton, Einstein
Published 2003
Journal Physics Essays
Volume 16
Number 3
No. of pages 10
Pages 375-384

Read the full paper here

Abstract

With the example of the motion of  Mercury around the sun it is shown, how Newton's Theory of Gravitation should be advanced by taking into consideration the finite velocity of gravitational expansion and the present concept of transference of forces by particles to be able to calculate so-called general relativistic phenomena, as the additional motion of Mercury's perihelion, the curvation of a light beam at the surface of the sun and the phenomena observed at the binary pulsar PSR 1913+16, maintaining classical conceptions of an Euklidean space and the Galileian principle of relativity.