Nickelodeon said:
by the "mechanical variance(s)" I was suggesting that for a planet not to be where it should be, as calculated by euclidean type maths, there has to be some influence acting on it, some imbalance. Given that it is following its local geodesic path (all the way round) I can't see where this imbalance is coming from unless the intensity of the geodesics are slightly assymetric somewhere along the line.
I’ve never cared for the term “geodesic” often used as though it were a magic bullet that explains how GR works.
As you imply there is no reason not to call the Newton path a “geodesic” as well.
So in that context I think I understand what your looking for in what is the “variance” that accounts for GR giving the different result vs. Newton.
Whether you want to call it “mechanical” or not for GR you will have to look to the “Curve” or “Warp” in an additional dimension (unrealistic in Euclidean terms) of something loosely described as “Space-Time”. So to measure what ever is going on in this “unrealistic” dimension you are wanting understand it more or less in Euclidean terms.
What Einstein’s formulas say is that due the this “distortion of local space-time” no matter how unrealistic it might seem we can measure the
inputs (mass of things) to this “unrealistic hidden from direct observation extra dimension or otherwise un-perceivable thing” to quantify in imaginary terms (literally imaginary numbers used in some versions of the math) the curve in that unknown whatever. Then with that imaginary curve defined GR can predict back into our Euclidean terms expectations
outputs (how masses in orbits etc. behave) including “variances” to our normal Euclidean expectations.
In this case that variance would be a slightly stronger acceleration being applied to the orbiting bodies.
That stroger acceleration produces a few things at variance with our Euclidean expectations.
A slightly faster orbit than expected giving “precession”.
An added acceleration that continues to pull the orbit down into a small faster orbit.
As effect continues the orbit gets smaller and the precession becomes more noticeable.
You have to say the math of Einstein was built to match observations – The M&M experiments failing to find the ether and checked against the Mercury precision. But then what theory of physics does not do that? There cannot be a theory to explain something without observing something that needed explaining.
But you also have to accept that Einstein provided a context to define and explain how his theory worked physically by using the addition of a “space-time” demension.
However it is a reasonable complaint, to call that explanation “unrealistic”.
With our current understanding that GR is a “background independent” theory not even Einstein could deny it is unrealistic in Euclidean terms.
A little ironic since he was so adamant about QM not being complete due to not being realistic ( as he put it not Local & Realistic).
If we knew all the answers we would know which was "more correct" QM or GR; those two still don't get along.