Antigravity and space probes

I have read over the past few years several references to this phenomenon that has been observed on several probes drifting in deep space.

The gist of it is, Pioneers 10 and 11 and Voyagers 1 and 2 (and it seems other probes) are not quite proceeding as predicted by Einstein’s equations of gravity. Oddly enough I’ve read conflicting reports, some say that the probes are slowing down more than expected, others saying that it’s less than expected.

If they’re slowing down less than expected, this might mean the existence of some anti-gravitational force, which would be interesting to investigate.

My question is - has anyone ascertained what’s causing this effect? And is it slowing down more or less than expected?

Apologies if this has been asked before but I can’t search the threads.

giving you a bump

The slowing of Pioneer 10 and 11 is still unexplained.

The Problem with Gravity: New Mission Would Probe Strange Puzzle (Oct 2004)

This wikipedia article on the Pioneer Anomoly claims that the Galileo and Ulysses spacecraft also experienced the effect.

The most recent review of the situation by the Pioneer tracking team is this paper (a large pdf).

What’s unexplained is a tiny anomolous acceleration towards the Sun, so the spacecraft are slowing down by slightly more than expected. The team themselves admit that they don’t know what the cause is, but suspect it’s mundane; from their conclusion:

In other words, there are at least two energy sources on board that could account for the effect, but nobody can quite nail it on either.

You may be interested in this related Great Debates thread from last year.

Interesting phenomenon. Here is another article attributing the anomalous behavior of the probes to conventional forces (rthermal radiation and gas leaks). Verey similar to the study that bonzer linked.

Thanks guys, that’s very helpful! I shall continue to monitor this issue with interest. The links you provided contain a lot of information.

Just a total WAG that came to mind, perhaps intersteller space is destructive to normal matter, but large gravity fields, or solar winds or something prevents this. The probes are dematerilizing as they travel further away, and the ‘front’ of the probe is experencing the greatest of this, giving it a net acceleration to the sun.

(well it’s better then the heat theory)

I think its Minbari artificial gravity technology.

Someone posted a similar thread a while back and I presented a theory of mine:

These probes are encountering the Heliopause…the edge of the Sun’s solar wind cannot expand against the prevailing interstellar conditions.

Basically, the probes’ tailwind just became a headwind.

Note that Anderson et al, linked to above, include the pressure of the solar wind in their error budget - see section VII, B. Their conservative estimate is that the “tailwind” from it is no more than 1/100th that from solar radiation and less than about a millionth of the unexplained acceleration (equation (54) and Table II).