The Pioneer Anomaly: A Deviation from Einstein Gravity?

by Ian O'Neill on April 16, 2008

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Artist impression of the Pioneer 10 probe (NASA)
Both Pioneer probes are approximately 240,000 miles (386,000 km) closer to the Sun than predicted by calculation. Scientists have been arguing over the cause of this mysterious force for a decade and reasons for the Pioneer anomaly range from the bizarre to the sublime. Is it a simple fuel leak, pushing the probes of course? Is it phantom dark matter dragging them down? Or do the gravity textbooks need to be re-written? Unfortunately there’s still no one answer, but some researchers believe there might be a small deviation in the large-scale space-time Einstein described in his famous theory of general relativity. See, I knew there would be a simple explanation…

The Pioneer 10 and 11 deep space probes were launched in 1972 and 1973, visiting Jupiter and Saturn before pushing on toward interplanetary space, into the unknown. The Pioneer program really lived up to its name, pioneering deep space exploration. But a few years on, as the probes passed the through the 20-70 AU mark, something strange happened… not suddenly, but gradually. Ten years ago Pioneer scientists noticed that something was wrong; the probes were slightly off course. Not by much, but both were experiencing a slight but constant sunward acceleration. The Pioneer probes had been measured some 240,000 miles (386,000 km) closer to the Sun than predicted. This might sound like a long way, but in astronomical terms it’s miniscule. 240,000 miles is a tiny deviation after 6.5 billion miles (10.5 billion km) of travel (it would take light 10 hours to cover this distance), but it’s a deviation all the same and physicists are having a very hard time trying to work out what the problem is.

That is until NASA physicist Slava Turyshev, co-discoverer of the anomaly, rescued a number of Pioneer magnetic data storage disks from being thrown out in 2006. These disks contain telemetric data, temperature and power readings that both Pioneer probes had transmitted back to mission control up to 2003 (when Pioneer 10 lost contact with Earth). From this, Turyshev and his colleagues teamed up with Viktor Toth, a computer programmer in Ottawa, Ontario, to design a new code designed to extract the vast quantity of raw binary code (1s and 0s), revealing the temperature and power readings from the crafts instruments. It sounds as if the search for the culprit of the Pioneer anomaly required a bit of forensic science.

Now the researchers have a valuable tool at their disposal. Turyshev and 50 other scientists are trying to match this raw data with modelled data in an effort to reconstruct the heat and electricity flow around the craft’s instrumentation. Electricity was supplied by the on-board plutonium generator, but this is only a small portion of the energy generated; the rest was converted to heat, lost to space and warmed up the probe’s bodywork. Heat lost to space and warming of the probe’s instruments are both thought to have a part to play in altering spacecraft momentum. So could this be the answer?

Tests are ongoing, and only a select few simulations have been run. However, early results indicate that around 30% of the Pioneer anomaly is down to the on-board heat distribution. The rest, it seems, still cannot be explained by probe dynamics alone. The team are currently processing a total of 50 years of telemetry data (from both Pioneer 10 and 11), so more simulations on the rich supply of transmissions from the probes may still uncover some surprises.

But on the back of everyone’s mind, and it keeps cropping up in every Pioneer anomaly article I find, that the fundamental physics of our universe may need to be brought into question. Sending long-distance deep space probes gives us a huge opportunity to see if what we observe locally is the same for other parts of the Solar System. Could Einstein’s general theory of relativity need to be “tweaked” when considering interplanetary (or interstellar) travel?

The researchers are excited if a mundane solution does not present itself (i.e. probe heat distribution effects), therefore indicating some other cosmic reason is behind this anomaly:

If we actually had a means in the solar system here to measure deviations from Einstein’s gravity, that would be phenomenal.” – Viktor Toth

In the mean time, Pioneer 10 is drifting silently toward the red star of Aldebarran and (barring any more anomalous behaviour) will arrive there in 2 million years time…

Sources: Scientific American, Symmetry Breaking News

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Hello! My name is Ian O'Neill and I've been writing for the Universe Today since December 2007. I am a solar physics doctor, but my space interests are wide-ranging. Since becoming a science writer I have been drawn to the more extreme astrophysics concepts (like black hole dynamics), high energy physics (getting excited about the LHC!) and general space colonization efforts. I am also heavily involved with the Mars Homestead project (run by the Mars Foundation), an international organization to advance our settlement concepts on Mars. I also run my own space physics blog: Astroengine.com, be sure to check it out!

  • Ed2

    Great news. My conjecture on the alpha constant requires the speed of light to be 3.00000 and not 2.99792458. if you use that correction factor in the distance calculation, the probes could easily be 240,000 km closer to the sun. The correction factor is simply 1.000692286. Ed2…4/17/08

  • Gavin

    “In the mean time, Pioneer 10 is drifting silently toward the red star of Aldebaran and will arrive there in 2 million years time…”

    I wonder how much of the spacecraft will have sublimed by then?

  • Uclock

    The distance of the probe and the rate of accelleration from the gravity of the Sun will cause a real time dilation between us here on Earth and the intruments on the probe. It is the understanding of time that is wrong and that is where the scientists should be looking. The further the probe travels the more its time will dilate compared to us.

  • Vanamonde

    We where discussing this in the forum. Was not the Voyager spacecraft and even maybe Mercury MESSENGER also experiencing this analomy?I don’t think it was just a Pioneer thang.

  • Fermin

    I guess we’ll find out the real answer in about 10 years. Isnt the New Horizon probe supposed to pass Pluto and onward to outerspace?

  • John

    Dust. There is a lot of it out there and Pioneer is going fast, so it will encounter more of it in a short time. Space objects clear a path through it. Pioneer is making its own path. I don’t think NASA has any way of measuring this. The effects have been observed with slingshots past Earth, where there is a speedup as it transits earth’s path. I don’t see a mystery here.

  • Dave

    This is just for Pioneer 10 spacecraft, but are we seeing the same thing happening to other spacecrafts as well, such as Voyager 1 and 2…because if those 2 spacecraft have nothing going on like that, then this might be something else

    Most of all, this is interstellar space travel, so there are many things to be considered which can take lot of time and research.

  • Silver Thread

    Ian O’Neill Said:

    “Hi Silver Thread:

    I believe it has been pretty much constant, but it cannot be attributed to the solar wind. It is a subtle sunward drift, which is the opposite direction to the solar wind flow…”

    I was referring to Wind Effects produced by other stars. I called it “Intersteller Wind” in an effort to make that distinction. Presumably in the areas closer to the Sun where the Solar wind can effectively negate Flow from other stars this anomaly would not be noticed, but beyond the outer orbits of Planet within our Solar System.

    Is it not possible that the Solar Wind’s Effect is decreased and as a result spacecraft traveling into the headwind of insterstellar space caused by the cumulative effects of the billions of other stars? Think of the Sun as a big fan, blowing into the face of many much bigger fans.

    In very close proximity to the Sun, it’s Solar Wind might effectively counter Interstellar Wind, but as you get further from it, the effect decreases and the overwhelming force of Wind from Other Stars would begin to slow you gradually, perhaps even eventually brining you to a halt entirely?

  • Jason Leary

    Ian,-

    Lateral thinking —is goofy, equivocal , thinking.. qute wrong thinking, and , hence , is quite contrary to systematic science . Any paydirt afforded by lateral thinking is due merely to epistemic luck .

  • http://astroengine.com/ Ian O’Neill

    Actually Jason, lateral thinking isn’t goofy – it is a different way of looking at things, departing from traditional logic. I think a heavy dose of lateral thinking was required by Einstein when breaking traditional physics rules to envision special relativity. Or by Pauli when understanding how subatomic particles interact in small volumes. Or quantum entanglement – I have no idea how physicists came to work out that theory! Mathematics and physics can only predict so much, “thinking out of the box” often leads to a new direction of thinking and philosophy. From there new science evolves.

    I for one wish I could think more laterally :-)

    Cheers, Ian

  • zylstra

    Wouldn’t the pros have taken into consideration everything you guys have mentioned thus far?

    Also, what about the flyby anomaly?

  • http://www.edevmachine.com Aztral

    Something I’m trying to spend some time looking into is the correlation between these anomolies, orbital velocities of stars at galaxy (and globular cluster) egdes and Neptune’s/Uranus’ formation (apparently they’re too large according to current solar system formation theory).

    To me it is becoming apparent that G is too low, and that something about the space-time in areas of relatively high density is slowing down orbital velocities near solar system/galaxy/clusters centers.

  • Wally

    It’s none of the above! It’s that darn Planet X. The fact the Pioneer is slowing down (so to speak) is proof the world is going to end in 2012 because Nibiru and Annunkais are returning to earth.

    Why can’t scientists connect the dots like the rest of us? Kidding, kidding….

  • Michael

    I have several ideas about what might cause such an anomaly that I have not seen articulated, but before I put them out there I need to confirm some assumptions. My understanding is that the location of the spacecraft is determined using Doppler. Where might I find detailed information on how the measurement is being made (radio telescopes, arrays, times of year, triangulation, etc.)? Also, would it be possible to get a detailed schematic of the spacecraft?

    Thanks,

    -Michael

  • C. Y. Lo

    The cause of the pioneer anomaly has been identified as the due to the charge-mass interaction interaction, a recently discovered neutral force that makes the unification of gravity and electromagnetism necessary.

  • C. Y. Lo

    The cause of the pioneer anomaly has been identified as the due to the charge-mass interaction, a recently discovered neutral force that makes the unification of gravity and electromagnetism necessary.

  • Jamahl Peavey

    There too many variables internal and external to the probe to say what the source of the error in position actually is.

  • NASA CHRIS

    One word, well.. three.

    MASS. Dark Matter.

    Or if you prefer, DUST.

  • mt0ne

    C. Y. Lo
    Site your sources please.

  • pioneerf90bt

    I really enjoyed reading this page…Thanks for this :)

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