Analysis of Don Kelly's Magnet Drop Tests: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Imported from text file |
Imported from text file |
||
| (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
The following report summarizes an analysis of the magnet plate drop test data provided by Don Kelly. It indicates that significantly slower drop times can be produced by a falling plate being tilted such that one edge will impact first, delaying the time at which the impact switch will be triggered. In addition, there are a number of variables not isolated that could cause widely scattered data. To this extent, the experiment needs to be more tightly controlled. The slower drop times reported by Kelly, as a result do not establish a magnetic-gravitational interaction. | The following report summarizes an analysis of the magnet plate drop test data provided by Don Kelly. It indicates that significantly slower drop times can be produced by a falling plate being tilted such that one edge will impact first, delaying the time at which the impact switch will be triggered. In addition, there are a number of variables not isolated that could cause widely scattered data. To this extent, the experiment needs to be more tightly controlled. The slower drop times reported by Kelly, as a result do not establish a magnetic-gravitational interaction. | ||
[[Category:Gravity]] | [[Category:Scientific Paper|analysis don kelly 's magnet drop tests]] | ||
[[Category:Gravity|analysis don kelly 's magnet drop tests]] | |||
Latest revision as of 21:16, 1 January 2017
| Scientific Paper | |
|---|---|
| Title | Analysis of Don Kelly\'s Magnet Drop Tests |
| Author(s) | Charles A Yost, Donald A Kelly |
| Keywords | error analysis, experiment, experimental error, gravitomagnetics, gravity, plates |
| Published | 1997 |
| Journal | Electric Spacecraft Journal |
| Number | 25 |
| Pages | 28-29 |
Abstract
The following report summarizes an analysis of the magnet plate drop test data provided by Don Kelly. It indicates that significantly slower drop times can be produced by a falling plate being tilted such that one edge will impact first, delaying the time at which the impact switch will be triggered. In addition, there are a number of variables not isolated that could cause widely scattered data. To this extent, the experiment needs to be more tightly controlled. The slower drop times reported by Kelly, as a result do not establish a magnetic-gravitational interaction.