If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Bad Astronomy and Universe Today Forum > Space and Astronomy > Astronomy
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 19-March-2008, 07:24 PM
grant hutchison grant hutchison is online now
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,788
Default Titius-Bode in 55 Cnc system - redux

It's difficult to know if Warren Platts will be pleased or irritated to learn that a variant of his ATM idea has been submitted and accepted for publication in Revista Mexicana de Astronomía y Astrofísica by Poveda & Lara: The Exo-planetary System of 55 Cancri and the Titius-Bode Law.

Grant Hutchison
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 20-March-2008, 02:59 AM
Jerry's Avatar
Jerry Jerry is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Earth
Posts: 3,611
Default

How fun. I'm sure dark matter can be arranged in an appropriate fashion to dismiss this.
__________________
jwj

If you always believe what you already know, you can't learn anything - Liz
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 21-March-2008, 06:16 PM
RalofTyr's Avatar
RalofTyr RalofTyr is online now
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: LV-426
Posts: 946
Default

Hmmm, the Titus-Bode law seems to be similar to the "Gas Giants only exist in the ice belt" way of thinking that all solar systems will be similar to ours. The article is trying to make 55 Can., fit into our mode of thinking of planet formation, which is looking to be incorrect due to our system bias.
__________________
Fields of Space

LOGIC, n.
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.

In the Year 2525.

"One small step for (a) man. One giant leap for mankind".

If an astronaut doesn't need good grammar, niether does you.

Host of Seraphim
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 21-March-2008, 07:04 PM
grant hutchison grant hutchison is online now
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,788
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RalofTyr View Post
Hmmm, the Titus-Bode law seems to be similar to the "Gas Giants only exist in the ice belt" way of thinking that all solar systems will be similar to ours. The article is trying to make 55 Can., fit into our mode of thinking of planet formation, which is looking to be incorrect due to our system bias.
The authors are aware of that problem for their hypothesis, even though they considerably over-egg the significance of their curve-fitting efforts:
Quote:
The existence of two hot Jupiter-like planets (n = 1, 2), in this system opens the problem of how to understand the persistence of the Titius-Bode law against the phenomenon of planet migration.
Grant Hutchison
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 21-March-2008, 07:15 PM
Noclevername's Avatar
Noclevername Noclevername is online now
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 10,608
Default

Quote:
The existence of two hot Jupiter-like planets (n = 1, 2), in this system opens the problem of how to understand the persistence of the Titius-Bode law against the phenomenon of planet migration.
Yes, how do we understand the persistence of something that doesn't actually persist?
__________________
"If this were play'd upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction."
Shakespeare, Twelfth Night
Illuminati's Razor-The most complicatedly evil answer is usually the most correct answer. - Fazor
"Every book is a children's book if the kid can read." - Mitch Hedberg
"Distance doesn’t matter much in space, where if you just start a thing off with the right kind of shove, sooner or later it will get where you want it to go." -Frederik Pohl, Mining the Oort
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 29-March-2008, 04:56 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by grant hutchison View Post
It's difficult to know if Warren Platts will be pleased or irritated to learn that a variant of his ATM idea has been submitted and accepted for publication in Revista Mexicana de Astronomía y Astrofísica by Poveda & Lara: The Exo-planetary System of 55 Cancri and the Titius-Bode Law.

Grant Hutchison
WOW!! And a Mexican journal no less!

But first let me say it's great to hear from you again Dr. Hutchison! How goes it in the land of Hume?

I knew if I sat around, I was going to get scooped. It only took three months. We should have jumped on it Tony! There goes the Nobel. Oh well. . . .

It's a nice paper, (skimmed so far--detailed comments soon to follow) but I don't think they plagiarized me because they left out the most important part: the Monte Carlo simulations. They haven't shown that the 55 Cancri distribution is statistically significant.

But hey, I must say that the best thing of all is that it's nice to know that I'm not the only completely crazy person on the planet!

Edit: Dr. Hutchison, I couldn't help noticing you started this thread in the mainstream astronomy section. Thanks for the compliment!
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron

Last edited by Warren Platts : 20-April-2008 at 02:54 PM. Reason: remove rude comment regarding Scotland, an American comedian, and felt production--sorry :)
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 29-March-2008, 05:18 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RalofTyr View Post
Hmmm, the Titus-Bode law seems to be similar to the "Gas Giants only exist in the ice belt" way of thinking that all solar systems will be similar to ours. The article is trying to make 55 Can., fit into our mode of thinking of planet formation, which is looking to be incorrect due to our system bias.
I will say this now. If this Titius-Bode pattern turns out to be fairly common for well-behaved systems with multiple planets with circular orbits confined to one plane, it will have significant implications for planetary formation theory because it will evetually have to be admitted that gas giants can form much closer to their parent stars than was previously thought. My theory is that the reason the Sol system inner planets are rocky is because, paradoxically, there never was much rocky material within the inner solar system. The metallicity is much higher at 55 Cancri; this allowed big, rocky cores to form near the star capable of holding onto massive atmospheres of light elements in situ.
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 29-March-2008, 06:12 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Poveda & Lara
The exponential fit to the 55 Cancri system was very good (with a coefficient of correlation R2 = 0.997) when we assigned the number n = 6 to the largest major semi-axis observed. The vacancy left at n = 5 leads us to propose the existence of a new planet with a major semi-axis at ~ 2 AU.
These figures are exactly what I found.
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 30-March-2008, 03:22 PM
tusenfem's Avatar
tusenfem tusenfem is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Graz, Austria
Posts: 1,716
Send a message via Yahoo to tusenfem
Default

After reading the paper, I still fail to see the significance after the papers by Graner and Dubrulle. Although a nice little result, it is a paper that tells 2 + 2 = 4, but why this is is left untouched.

Secondly, the reason for not assuming Mercury as one of the planets to make the new exponential TB law seems totally superfluous, no reason is given for it, apart from the original TB law also did not use this planet. Does not sound like a real reason to me. And if you have to do this, why not leave out the first planet in the 55 Cancri system?

I think maybe reading Lynch and Neslusan will give some more insight into real or chance. From the latter abstract:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Neslusan
Using the Lynch method, we continue the discussion on the statistical signiÞcance of agreement between planetary distributions and a power law. The Lynch method determines the probability that a power law (e.g. the Titius-Bode law) will agree by chance, at the observed level, with a given sequence of planetary distances.We find interesting results by assuming not only that the mean asteroid-belt distance should be considered as a regular planetary distance, but also that the current distance of the Earth should be regarded as peculiar and omitted from the Titius-Bode law. We examine these assumptions under two cases: (a) where no physical limitations
are imposed and (b) where relatively close planetary orbits are excluded. We Þnd that the corresponding sequence of distances matches the power law by chance with a probability of only 0.3 per cent for case (a) and 3 per cent for (b). These values are in direct contrast to those corresponding to the traditional TitiusÐBode law as well as those corresponding to some common alternative assumptions. These range from 29 to 100 per cent for (a) and 95 to 100 percent for (b).
__________________
************************************************** *************************
Optimism does not change the laws of physics. (T'Pol)
A good scientist has freed himself of concepts and keeps his mind open to what is. (Dao De Jing 27)
************************************************** *************************
Martin ( http://www.geocities.com/DrMartinV )
Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 31-March-2008, 04:41 AM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Default

Hey tsenfem

Glad to hear from you!
Quote:
Originally Posted by tusenfem View Post
After reading the paper, I still fail to see the significance after the papers by Graner and Dubrulle. Although a nice little result, it is a paper that tells 2 + 2 = 4, but why this is is left untouched.

Secondly, the reason for not assuming Mercury as one of the planets to make the new exponential TB law seems totally superfluous, no reason is given for it, apart from the original TB law also did not use this planet. Does not sound like a real reason to me. And if you have to do this, why not leave out the first planet in the 55 Cancri system?
I saw that too.
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron
Reply With Quote
  #11 (permalink)  
Old 23-April-2008, 06:16 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Thumbs up

Quote:
I don't think they plagiarized me
Just a couple of things:
  • A Google search on "Titius-Bode" and "55 Cancri" reveals that other thread on the front page.
  • They report an r2 score like that's a normal thing to do, yet in the literature I've been scouring lately, the only other reference where I found something similar is in an obscure letter to the editor of the The American Statistician from 1969, (Vol. 23, No. 5 (Dec., 1969), pp. 52-53), penned by a C. Mitchell Dayton where he calculates a correlation coefficent for the Solar System applied to a linear TBL model. (BTW Poveda & Lara mistakenly refer to their R2 as a "correlation coefficient" which is just plain R; R2 is the "coefficient of determiniation".)
  • The forumula they use is mathematically virtually identical to the one I constructed, yet it's like they changed it around to make it look different, sort of like using the capitalized R2.
Well, as they say, imitation is the most sincere form of flattery; or was it that great minds are to be found in the same gutter? At least, they've given the idea the publicity it deserves. Indeed, the internet's practically on fire!

In any case, they didn't get into significance testing, so thus the meaning of their R2 is open to interpretation, to say the least. Dayton, in his letter goes on to say that
Quote:
randomization and the potential repetition of the circumstances generating the measured values are essential ingredients for the realistic application of a stochastic induction model, whether it be Bayesian or classical. Random selection of a planetary system from a defined universe of available systems would render Good's approach meaningful; since this strategy is not presently feasible, the use of a model based on random sampling variability seems completely out of place.
Remember, Dayton was writing in 1969, when computing power was slow and expensive. For example, Ephron (1971, Journal of the American Statistical Association Vol. 66: 552-559--it's in JSTOR) attempted a Monte Carlo simulation of sorts, but he could only do a measly 2,000 attempts, and his histogram is pathetically jerky-looking.

(BTW, there was an interesting flurry of interest in the Titius-Bode law among certain American statisticians in the very late 1960's and very early 1970's. I'm trying to put together a bibliography.)

But nowadays, a typical desktop computer could do 1 billion or more simulations in a single day if it wanted to. So I think I was on the right track by calculating a probability distribution for each specific scenario. However, reading through the statistical literature on the TBL has made me realize that I perhaps made too much of the actual distributions that I constructed. This is because the question of whether any proposed hypothesis is statistically significant is relative to an alternative null hypothesis that is rejected. Here is what Ephron has to say:
Quote:
The obvious question is whether Bode's law is "real," or whether it is simply an ingenious numerical artifact of Bode's imagination. We can make this a statistical question by specifying:
  1. a statistical model describing what we mean by Bode's law being real, and
  2. an alternative, less interesting, statistical model describing the situation where Bode's law is an artifact.
Once the two models have been agreed upon, the question of the validity of Bode's law reduces to a problem of hypothesis testing.
So in that other thread, I chose an uninteresting alternative null hypothesis, all right--just take the random planetary distances from a totally uniform distribution. The only problem is that it was too uninteresting to be interesting. It was a straw man, really, I must admit, guaranteed to produce the desired result. As Ephron's rival, I. J. Good wrote (1969, American Statistical Association Journal 64: 23-34, page 30):
Quote:
Since it is obvious that d1, d2, . . . , d10 cannot be regarded as selected from a uniform distribution there is no point in contrasting Bode's law with that hypothesis: if we did so it would be obvious that Bode's law was not accidental.
BAM! Cut down to size by a single sentence by a man writing 40 years ago!

Quoting Good, Ephron added
Quote:
The point Good makes is one familiar to politicians: if you state your opponent's case absurdly enough, your own position will look good by comparison.
So, noting that as one progresses out of the Solar System, the spacing between successive planets always increases, Ephron proposed his own uninteresting null hypothesis: the law of increasing differences.

Quote:
If one believes that the law of increasing differences is not accidental, but rather a reasonably dependable result of whatever mechanism determines planetary distances, then this fact should be incorporated into any hypothesis proposed as an alternative to the stronger hypothesis of Bode's law. This is not the case for the log uniform hypothesis. For example, a random division of [log d2, log[i]d8] into six intervals by the uniform choice of five interior points, when converted back to distance units by exponetiation, yields increasing differences only three percent of the time. (Computer simulation yielded 61 cases in 2,000 repetitions.)
Ephron's "law" of increasing differences may or may not seem absurd to you, but it has taken on some historical significance because it was addressed in some detail in Hayes and Tremaine's (1988) Icarus paper (preprint available at the ArXiv; the original at ScienceDirect). Now, Hayes and Tremaine's paper is one of the more opaque papers I've read in a long time (though they provide a complete discussion of possible radius exclusion principles). But their bottom line with regard to the law of increasing distances is that any system "that satisfies the law of increasing differences will often satisfy all but the most stringent exclusion laws." (p. 555) In other words, "the law of increasing differences is a much more restrictive assumption than radius-exclusion laws, and in the absence of any physical justification, it does not form a sound basis from which to judge the validity of Bode's law." (p. 555-556). That is, the law of increasing differences is an unfair null hypothesis because it's too strong.

On the other hand, if it could be shown that the law of increasing differences as a comparatively uninteresting, alternative, null hypothesis to the Titius-Bode law should be rejected, that would indeed warrant the assertion that the Titius-Bode spacing pattern of 55 Cancri is a real pattern.

So, naturally, I had to try it.

I used a simple broken stick algorithm to generate random systems that satisfy the law of increasing differences.

The first step is to break a stick of length 1 into 7 pieces--2 end pieces and 5 interior pieces. This is accomplished by drawing six numbers from the uniform distribution ([U[0, 1]). These numbers are then sorted in a nondescending order.

Then I calculated the length of the interior sticks by taking the absolute value of the differences between adjacent random numbers, and then the interior sticks themselves were sorted.

The next step to generating the random system was to reconstruct the semimajor axes: a2, a3, a4, a5. Note that the one exception to the law of increasing differences in our Solar System is Mercury, in that it is 0.4 AU from the Sun, whereas the distance to Venus is 0.7 AU, thus the difference is only 0.3 AU. Thus, a1 and a6 are already given because the two end pieces were never sorted.

The final step was to throw out the 5th planet, because of the empty orbital that Poveda and Lara's model assumes.

Once the random system is generated, then the r2 can be computed in the ordinary matter, and stored into the histogram to construct the probability distribution necessary to conduct a significance test.

Once the histogram was constructed out of 100 million random solar systems (see attached chart), it was determined that the 95th percentile of r2 fell out at right about 0.9967. Thus, for a 5% level of significance, 0.9967 would be the critical value. The r2 reported by Poveda and Lara of 0.997 exceeds the critical value. (I reported an r2 of 0.9975; but that was rounded up from 0.997488; if I had chosen three significant figures, I also would have had 0.997.) Therefore, we can say with 95% confidence that we can reject the null hypothesis of the law of increasing differences as a possible explanation for the spacing pattern an 55 Cancri.



Granted, a 95% confidence level is not nearly as high as the 99.9% confidence level I reported in that other thread, but there's no glory to be gained in showing that a straw man is false with a confidence level of 99.9%; it is much more satisfying to be 95% sure that one is warranted in rejecting the strongest null hypothesis proposed in the literature so far.

(Caveat: these are preliminary results, I need to double check everything and increase the number of random systems to 1 billion to smooth out the curve even more before I send the manuscript into Icarus!)
Attached Images
File Type: png PROBDIST.png (142.7 KB, 7 views)
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron
Reply With Quote
  #12 (permalink)  
Old 23-April-2008, 08:41 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Default The BASIC program I used

REM *** Increasing differences model: Solar System
REM *** Use broken stick technique to generate distances,
REM *** then sort the distances to get random system with
REM *** increasing distances. Then figure out new A(I)'s.
REM *** Then calculate R-squared and add to histogram.

REM *** input the number of orbitals (planets)
LET ORBITALS = 9

REM *** input the semimajor axis of the innermost planet
REM *** note that INNERMOST = mercury's semimajor axis
REM *** less A(min) (which is 0.15 AU)
LET INNERMOST = 0.23710

REM *** input the semimajor axis of the outermost planet
LET OUTERMOST = 29.91107

REM *** input average x for least squares now, because it
REM *** never changes
LET AVGX = 5

REM *** number of trials between PRNG seed changing
LET MAXTRIALS = 100000

REM *** number of PRNG seed changes
REM *** MAXTRIALS x MAXCYCLES = total # systems generated
LET MAXCYCLES = 10000

REM *** A(i) is for the semimajor axes. A(1) and A(outermost)
REM *** never change, so we can set their values now
DIM A(ORBITALS)
LET A(1) = INNERMOST
LET A(ORBITALS) = OUTERMOST

REM *** we transform the semimajor axes into logs to compute
REM *** the R-squared goodness of fit statistic
DIM LOGA(ORBITALS)
LET LOGA(1) = LOG(INNERMOST)
LET LOGA(ORBITALS) = LOG(OUTERMOST)

REM *** D(i) the differences between consecutive orbitals
DIM D(ORBITALS - 1)

REM *** X(i) is for the x-axis in the least squares zone
REM *** X(i) aka the ordinal of the orbitals w/ planets

DIM X(ORBITALS)

REM *** load the x-axis that keeps track of 9 planets
REM *** note it goes {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} because the
REM *** scenario calls for 9 planets, no skipped orbitals,
FOR I = 1 TO ORBITALS
LET X(I) = I
NEXT I

REM *** HIST(i) is the histogram that defines the
REM *** probability distribution which is the final goal
DIM HIST(10001)

FOR CYCLE = 1 TO MAXCYCLES
REM *** we print the cycle # to keep track of progress of program
PRINT CYCLE
RANDOMIZE
FOR TRIAL = 1 TO MAXTRIALS
REM *** We are normalizing to the size of the whole system.
REM *** We generate random numbers from within the innermost
REM *** to the outermost orbitals
FOR I = 2 TO (ORBITALS - 1)
LET A(I) = INNERMOST + (OUTERMOST - INNERMOST) * RND
NEXT I

REM *** now sort in ascending order
LET J = 3
DO
LET I = J
DO
IF A(I - 1) > A(I) THEN
LET BUFF = A(I)
LET A(I) = A(I - 1)
LET A(I - 1) = BUFF
END IF
LET I = I - 1
LOOP UNTIL I = 2
LET J = J + 1
LOOP UNTIL J = ORBITALS

REM *** calculate the length of the sticks
FOR I = 1 TO ORBITALS - 1
LET D(I) = A(I+1) - A(I)
NEXT I

REM *** now sort the sticks
LET J = 2
DO
LET I = J
DO
IF D(I - 1) > D(I) THEN
LET BUFF = D(I)
LET D(I) = D(I - 1)
LET D(I - 1) = BUFF
END IF
LET I = I - 1
LOOP UNTIL I = 1
LET J = J + 1
LOOP UNTIL J = ORBITALS

REM *** now reconstruct the semimajor axes
REM *** you already know A(1) and A(ORBITALS)
FOR I = 2 TO ORBITALS - 1
LET A(I) = A(I - 1) + D(I - 1)
NEXT I

REM *** the following statements are for debugging purposes
REM FOR I = 1 TO ORBITALS
REM PRINT A(I)
REM NEXT I
REM PRINT "R-SQUARED = ";

REM *** time to figure out the r-squared score
REM *** start by tranforming data by taking logarithm
REM *** of the semimajor axes, A(i)
REM *** we already know the logs of the first and last A(i)
LET SUMY = LOGA(1) + LOGA(ORBITALS)
FOR I = 2 TO ORBITALS - 1
LET LOGA(I) = LOG(A(I))
LET SUMY = SUMY + LOGA(I)
NEXT I
LET AVGY = SUMY / ORBITALS

REM *** now figure the sums of the squares of the
REM *** deviations (x - avg(x)) and (y - avg(y))
REM *** note I don't do X^2 because X*X is faster
LET SUMXSQ = 0
LET SUMYSQ = 0
LET SUMXY = 0
FOR I = 1 TO ORBITALS - 1
LET SUMXSQ = SUMXSQ + ((X(I) - AVGX) * (X(I) - AVGX))
LET SUMYSQ = SUMYSQ + ((LOGA(I) - AVGY) * (LOGA(I) - AVGY))
LET SUMXY = SUMXY + ((X(I) - AVGX) * (LOGA(I) - AVGY))
NEXT I

REM *** B is the slope of the best-fit least squared
REM *** line of the form y = a + bx
LET B = SUMXY / SUMXSQ

REM *** SSRESID is the so-called residual sum of squares
LET SSRESID = SUMYSQ - (B * SUMXY)

REM *** now we calculate the R-squared score!
LET RSQ = 1 - (SSRESID / SUMYSQ)

REM *** next statement for debugging purposes
REM PRINT RSQ

REM *** this adds the R-squared to the histogram that will
REM *** eventually form the probability distribution for
REM *** determining the critical value that the observed
REM *** R-squared of 55Cnc must exceed in order to reject
REM *** the law of increasing differences null hypothesis
LET HIST(INT(RSQ * 10000)) = HIST(INT(RSQ * 10000)) + 1
NEXT TRIAL
NEXT CYCLE

REM *** time to output the probability distribution
REM *** the left hand tail is of no interest, so we skip that part
FOR I = 1 TO 4999
LET COUNTER = COUNTER + HIST(I)
NEXT I
FOR I = 5000 TO 9999
REM *** prints out the bins corresponding an R-squared score
PRINT USING "%.####": (I / 10000);

REM *** print out the number of systems for that bin
PRINT USING "##########": HIST(I);

REM *** the running total of bins from lowest to highest
LET COUNTER = COUNTER + HIST(I)
PRINT USING "###########": COUNTER
NEXT I

LET TOTALTRIALS = (TRIAL -1) * (CYCLE - 1)
PRINT "TOTAL TRIALS = "; TOTALTRIALS
PRINT "FOR TOTAL PLANETS = "; ORBITALS

PRINT "TOTAL LENGTH IS "; OUTERMOST - INNERMOST; "FROM "; INNERMOST; "TO "; OUTERMOST
END
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron

Last edited by Warren Platts : 13-May-2008 at 01:56 PM. Reason: Add source code for the most recent simulation
Reply With Quote
  #13 (permalink)  
Old 24-April-2008, 11:47 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Default

Hello fellow amateurs,

After 17 hours of cranking, my computer generated
1,000,000,000
random solar systems resembling 55 Cancri in that there are 5 planets, 6 orbitals, with the 5th orbital apparently empty--as our near-sighted telescopes report for the real 55 Cancri system--and, best of all, all
1,000,000,000
random solar systems satisfy the law of increasing differences.

I also rechecked every single mathematical and statistical step against the textbooks. The only thing that changed, is that the critical value, once interpolated, edged up ever so slightly from about 0.99673 to 0.99678.

The attached chart only shows the very right-handed portion of the probability distribution (the left-handed tail extends all the way back to 0.5003, so it's useless showing all that). But you can see the critical value, and how the R-squared exceeds the critical value. Therefore, we must reject the null hypothesis--the law of increasing differences--in favor of our old friend--the Titius-Bode law--for 55 Cancri.

I challenge anybody to find anything wrong with the present analysis. . . .

Next stop:
The Solar System
Attached Images
File Type: png CritVal.png (55.7 KB, 8 views)
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron
Reply With Quote
  #14 (permalink)  
Old 26-April-2008, 03:49 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Thumbs down

Well, I tryed out the new technique on the Solar System. At first I was dismayed and bummed out that the Solar System didn't even come close to satisfying the 95% confidence level. Now, I'm merely perplexed. It turns out that the probability distributions based on the law of increasing differences behave oppositely compared to the distributions based on the pure random spacing null hypothesis. That is, as you add planets, the former more closely resemble exponential progressions and the median R-squared scores actually improve, whereas for the latter, the median and 95% critical values decline as one adds planets.

Thus, the R-squared for the Solar System, 0.9933--figure includes Mercury and Ceres, but excludes Pluto for the a priori reasons (1) that we know enough about Pluto to know that it is Kuiper Belt object that has somehow made its way into the inner Solar System, and (2) Pluto is in any case locked in an orbital resonance with Neptune, and therefore does not constitute an independent sample--is less than that for 55 Cancri (0.9975); but on the purely random null hypothesis, they had the same level of significance (0.1%). I had expected that under the law of increasing differences null hypothesis, the situation would be similar.

However, the Solar System's R-squared fell out at about the 87th percentile according to the probability distribution I generated based on 9 planets, no empty slots, rather than close to the expected 95th percentile. But as you can see from the attached charts, the first clearly shows how sensitive the median R-squared is to increasing planets. The second chart shows that the 95% critical value is not as sensitive, but the important point is that it doesn't decline when more planets are added. (The arrow at the far left is the observed R-squared of the Solar System. The number of trials for each distribution was 10 million.)

So now I'm coming around to Hayes and Tremaine's (1998) way of thinking: that the law of increasing differences is an unfair null hypothesis to test against Titius-Bode laws.

I'm open to suggestions at this point.

Meanwhile, back to the drawing board. . . .
Attached Images
File Type: gif image001.gif (21.4 KB, 5 views)
File Type: gif image003.gif (20.7 KB, 6 views)
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron
Reply With Quote
  #15 (permalink)  
Old 06-May-2008, 06:33 PM
Warren Platts's Avatar
Warren Platts Warren Platts is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Pittsford, Vermont
Posts: 1,359
Wink The Titius-Bode law proves intelligent design!!!

I've been reading, and I found this paper by Neslusan (2004), and he says that it's not Mercury or Neptune that are the odd planets out--Earth is the odd planet.

So I tryed in my own way to replicate Neslusan's results--and it's true: Earth is by far the planet that doesn't belong!

Consider the table below (in all scenarios Ceres is included, but Pluto is excluded because of the a priori reasons that we know enough about Pluto to say it's obviously a Kuiper Belt object, and since it's locked in an orbital resonance with Neptune, Pluto wouldn't constitute an independent sample in any case). The numbers are the corresponding r2 scores:
Code:
Only Pluto Excluded              0.9933
Mercury Excluded as well         0.9918
Neptune Excluded   "             0.9905
Earth Excluded     "             0.998