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Pioneer Anomaly

All articles tagged with #pioneer anomaly

Heat Explains Pioneer Drift, Not New Physics
space11 days ago

Heat Explains Pioneer Drift, Not New Physics

New analysis shows the decades-long Pioneer anomaly—the small sunward drift of Pioneer 10 and 11—was caused by asymmetric thermal radiation from the spacecraft’s plutonium-238 RTGs and electronics, not a breakdown of gravity; detailed archival data and thermal modeling by Turyshev and colleagues demonstrated that the recoil from emitted infrared photons pushed the probes backward, a tiny, decaying force that disappeared as the fuel decayed, leaving general relativity intact while the probes continue to drift outward.

Unraveling the Mystery of the Pioneer Anomaly at 20 Astronomical Units
space-exploration2 years ago

Unraveling the Mystery of the Pioneer Anomaly at 20 Astronomical Units

NASA's Pioneer 10 and 11 probes experienced unexplained acceleration toward the Sun at around 20 astronomical units, challenging Newton's gravitational inverse-square law. Some physicists proposed new physics to explain the anomaly, but later analysis revealed that the acceleration was due to the recoil force from anisotropic thermal radiation emission off the spacecraft. This discovery provided a more likely explanation, highlighting the importance of thorough data analysis in space exploration.

Unraveling the Mystery of the Pioneer Anomaly: NASA Probes' Fate at 20 Astronomical Units
space-science2 years ago

Unraveling the Mystery of the Pioneer Anomaly: NASA Probes' Fate at 20 Astronomical Units

NASA's Pioneer 10 and 11 probes experienced an anomalous acceleration towards the Sun when they reached around 20 astronomical units (AU) from Earth, challenging Newton's gravitational inverse-square law. Some physicists proposed new physics or the expansion of the universe as possible explanations. However, further analysis of Doppler data revealed that the acceleration was due to the recoil force caused by an anisotropic emission of thermal radiation from the spacecraft. This finding suggests that there was no anomaly and that Newton's inverse-square law remains valid.