Mathematicians find 12,000 new solutions to 'unsolvable' 3-body problem (www.space.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 24 Sep 2023 18:00
https://lemmy.world/post/5654088

Mathematicians find 12,000 new solutions to ‘unsolvable’ 3-body problem::Calculating the way three things orbit each other is notoriously tricky, but a new study may reveal 12,000 new solutions.

#technology

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FatTony@lemmy.world on 24 Sep 2023 18:26 next collapse

I guess we’ll just go with the first one.

skabbywag02@lemm.ee on 24 Sep 2023 18:42 next collapse

Damn it, I just started Cixin’s book and now these jerks are going to spoil it;)

treefrog@lemm.ee on 24 Sep 2023 19:00 next collapse

You clicked the thread!

And me too, I’m just at the beginning of the second book lol

somedude@lemmy.ninja on 24 Sep 2023 19:51 collapse

I didn’t think that book lived up to the hype. But maybe I just didn’t get it.

1bluepixel@lemmy.world on 24 Sep 2023 21:20 next collapse

I thought the first book was pretty meh with big ideas but mid execution, but holy hell was the sequel exciting and leagues ahead in terms of quality. Really delivers on what the first novel sets up.

fmwp1lrU@lemmy.world on 25 Sep 2023 00:08 next collapse

Idk it was fun for me. I thought it was interesting being from China, I’m not that well read so the Chinese author put a cool perspective on the novel.

ikidd@lemmy.world on 25 Sep 2023 03:25 next collapse

It was pretty meh.

frezik@midwest.social on 25 Sep 2023 15:51 collapse

I think it’s similar to a lot of golden age SF novels from Clarke, Asimov, etc. Big, fantastic ideas combined with characters that are cardboard cutouts.

GravelPieceOfSword@lemmy.ca on 24 Sep 2023 18:56 next collapse

Now onto the four body problem!

frezik@midwest.social on 24 Sep 2023 18:58 next collapse

This is one of those headlines that’s more obscuring than enlightening. We knew a bunch of ways that you could arrange three gravitational bodies and have them be in a stable orbit around each other. This adds 12,000 more. However, a general solution is still incredibly complicated, and the Trisolarans would still like to have a little chat with us in Australia some time.

Sibbo@sopuli.xyz on 24 Sep 2023 19:00 next collapse

Title is wrong. Unsolvable means no general closed form solution. That doesn’t mean that single constellations cannot be proven stable.

There is for example a trivial solution to the n-body problem. Arrange all bodies equidistant on a circle and have them move at the speed that keeps them on the circle.

indigomirage@lemmy.ca on 24 Sep 2023 19:04 next collapse

Spoiler alert…?

just_another_person@lemmy.world on 24 Sep 2023 19:07 next collapse

Isn’t this already solved by total gravitational mass anyway? I’m not understanding what this article even means. You have 3 bodies that are constantly losing mass, and any difference in equilibrium means they fall out of orbit with each other. 3 bodies of exactly or near the density would decay at the same rate. I’m a laymen, but help me out here.

Mini_Moonpie@startrek.website on 24 Sep 2023 22:57 collapse

PBS has a good video on it: youtu.be/et7XvBenEo8?si=w2ZJDnYQbWDY3TgR

The summary is that scientists don’t have a single, simple equation that they can use to precisely predict the orbits of three bodies based on the initial positions and velocities of those bodies like they can with only two bodies (the two-body problem). The solutions they have are either approximate solutions (not precise, but close enough to be useful), equations that apply only to specific types of orbits and therefore can’t be used to predict other three-body orbits, and a general equation that is so ridiculously long that it is not really usable. I am also just a layman, so take my summary with a grain of salt, but hopefully the video will help.

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 24 Sep 2023 22:57 collapse

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MonkderZweite@feddit.ch on 25 Sep 2023 12:47 collapse

Wsn’t it solved long ago? There’s even an old KSP mod ‘Pricipia’ for it.

PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world on 25 Sep 2023 15:35 next collapse

So they mean there’s no general solution. That doesn’t mean that we can’t find specific solutions.

As for your notion of solved, that’s solved in a numerical sense.

frezik@midwest.social on 25 Sep 2023 15:46 collapse

You can simulate a specific arrangement of n-bodies, where n > 2. Depending on how accurate you want it to be, you may need a supercomputer.

If n = 2, then you can work it out on a napkin. If n = 1, you can draw a circle, point at it, and say “I figured it out!”