Alternative theories being tested by Gravity probe B

In summary: SCC predicts a small value for the cosmological constant due to the non-linear behavior of the metric in curved spacetime.3. SCC predicts a universe that is unstable and will eventually collapse in on itself.In summary, the Gravity Probe B satellite has placed four (over redundant) gyroscopes in low polar Earth orbit to primarily test two predictions of General Relativity. The first effect being tested is (for the GP-B polar orbit) a N-S geodetic precession, caused by the amount a gyro 'leans' over into the slope of curved space. The second effect being tested is the
  • #141
Kris Krogh said:
General relativity predicts 41 marcsec/yr. Suppose the measurement were -75 ± 75 marcsec/yr. That would rule out general relativity, while a zero precession would remain possible. So the central value does have meaning.
Hi Kris,

The central value here has a meaning only for the combination of three effects (frame-dragging, “polhode” motion and "patches" torques) and the contribution from each of these effects is obviously not still known.

As they say on the "Gravity Probe B" site :

The GP-B instrument has ample resolution to measure the frame-dragging effect precisely, but the team has discovered small torque and sensor effects that must be accurately modeled and removed from the result.

Paul
 
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Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #142
Hi Paul,

When these extraneous influences like the polhode motion are estimated, of course that's done separately from the frame-dragging they are trying to measure. The latter is whatever is left when everything else has been accounted for.

This preliminary result is of the form x ± 100 marcsec/yr or x ± 50 marcsec/yr, where x has to be some specific number. (It can't be anything from -1000 to +1000, or you'd have an uncertainty of ± 1000.) Question is, what is x?

Best wishes,

Kris
 
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  • #143
Kris Krogh said:
This preliminary result is of the form x ± 100 marcsec/yr or x ± 50 marcsec/yr, where x has to be some specific number. (It can't be anything from -1000 to +1000, or you'd have an uncertainty of ± 1000.) Question is, what is x?
Hi Kris,

You surely have read in my thoughts :biggrin: About one hour ago, I sent an e-mail at the contact address provided on the GP-B official site and I asked the question:

The margin of error for GP-B is told to be 50-100 marcsec/yr. The question I would like to ask is the following: is there any best value for the frame-dragging effect ? That is, can we say the result for the frame-dragging effect is X more or less 50-100 marcsec/yr, X being the best value. If so, is that value of X available ?

I hope I will get an answer :wink:

Best wishes,

Paul
 
  • #144
Thank you Paul!
 
  • #145
Does anyone know the spin axis orientation for each of the four gyroscopes ?
 
  • #146
LeBourdais said:
Hi Kris,

You surely have read in my thoughts :biggrin: About one hour ago, I sent an e-mail at the contact address provided on the GP-B official site and I asked the question:



I hope I will get an answer :wink:

Best wishes,

Paul

Hi everybody

I also sent an email but received no answer so far.
This plot is very intriguing since it is clearly there to show us and explain to us what is the main source of uncertainty: the 100 marcsec/year.
This is why i believe that the resonance peeks we can see regularly spaced on the plot actually give us the order of magnitude of this error and indeed the higher peeks reach the 40 marcsec level (what else in this plot could justify the 100 marcsec given just below it?). If they don't understand at all what is the origin of these peeks, they can give the most pessimistic error: approximately 2.5 times 40 marcsec. ANother question is: is the reported
drift rate integrated from the origin to the bin time ? Presumably not (it would be indicated) so that the integrated drift rate at the end time must be very close to zero!
But what is even stranger here is that whatever the magnitude of the peeks, the very low dispersion of most points about the mean value and the ability to identify the peaks, subtract them and provide us with a mitigated red fit is a clear indication that whatever value was subtracted before, the error on the mean residual is extremely better than 100marcsec! and since other sources of errors are negligible compared to this one (the other errors are on the same poster) , my feeling is that they
were able to give a much better error but they decided not to give it and not to give also a central value. If the central value is at zero at the milliarcsec precision level, this might indicate a huge overestimation of the error already enough to produce a kind of earthquake in the community...so may be they want to work 8 more monthes to be sure since this would be a revolutionary
result! Is there some GP-B expert around?

regards

Fred
 
  • #147
henryco said:
Hi everybody

I also sent an email but received no answer so far.

Salut Fred :biggrin:

I think it's a good thing that more than one people ask them for the same question.

Best wishes

Paul
 
  • #148
Even though the results are preliminary, some theories appear to have been eliminated. Anyone care to write up a synopsis?
 
  • #149
CarlB said:
Even though the results are preliminary, some theories appear to have been eliminated. Anyone care to write up a synopsis?

Anything that did not give about 6.6 for the geodetic precession is falsified. We can ignore the frame-dragging predictions as so far not able to be tested.

Here is Garth's list.

Garth said:
  1. Einstein's General Relativity(GR)
  2. Brans-Dicke theory (BD)
  3. Barber's Self Creation Cosmology (SCC),
  4. Moffat's Nonsymmetric Gravitational Theory (NGT),
  5. Hai-Long Zhao's Mass Variance SR Theory (MVSR),
  6. Stanley Robertson's Newtonian Gravity Theory (NG),
  7. Junhao & Xiang's Flat Space-Time Theory (FST).
  8. R. L. Collin's Mass-Metric Relativity (MMR) and
  9. F. Henry-Couannier's Dark Gravity Theory (DG).
  10. Alexander and Yunes' prediction for the Chern-Simons gravity theory (CS).
  11. Kris Krogh's Wave Gravity Theory (WG)
  12. Hongya Liu & J. M. Overduin prediction of the http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/journal/issues/ApJ/v538n1/50681/50681.text.html?erFrom=5252751197746712308Guest#sc8 gravity theory (KK).

The predictions are:

A. GPB Geodetic precession (North-South)
  1. GR = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
  2. BD = [itex](3\omega + 4)/(3\omega + 6)[/itex] 6.6144 arcsec/yr. where [itex]\omega[/itex] >6.
  3. SCC = 4.4096 arcsec/yr.
  4. NGT = 6.6144 - a small [itex]\sigma[/itex] correction arcsec/yr.
  5. MVSR = 0.0 arcsec/yr.
  6. NG = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
  7. FST = 4.4096 arcsec/yr.
  8. MMR = -6.56124 arcsec/yr.
  9. DG = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
  10. CS = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
  11. WG = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
  12. KK = (1 + b/6 - 3b2 + ...) 6.6144 arcsec/yr. where 0 < b < 0.07.

Based on this we have models 3, 5, 7 and 8 as falsified.
The paramaterized models 2, 4 and 12 simply have a new constraint on the free parameter.

The remaining models are:
  • GR (1)
  • Parameterized models, which are the same as GR in the limit. 2,4,10,12: BD, NGT, CS, KK.
  • Models with frame dragging at 25% of what GR expects. 6: NG
  • Models with no frame-dragging. 9,11: DG, WG.

Cheers -- Sylas
 
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  • #150
Hi Paul,

The spin axes of all four gyros were aligned with IM Pegasi. These are its coordinates, posted previously by Garth:

RA (J1991.25) : 22h 53m 02.279"
DEC (J1991.25) : +160 50' 28.540"

Kris
 
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  • #151
Kris Krogh said:
The spin axes of all four gyros were aligned with IM Pegasi. These are its coordinates, posted previously by Garth:

RA (J1991.25) : 22h 53m 02.279"
DEC (J1991.25) : +160 50' 28.540"
Hi Kris,

Do you mean to say that the spin of the four gyroscopes have been initially aligned in the same direction ?

That sounds strange :confused:

Paul
 
  • #152
Hi Paul,

It's a good system. Without this redundancy, they would be in a bad situation now. They need be able to compare the outputs of multiple devices to correct errors. Two rotate one way, and two the other, but they all have the same axis of rotation. You can find this kind of information on the GP-B web site.

Kris
 
  • #153
New clothe put on the king

cosmopot said:
I wrote lots of papers and chatted on many forums but no one challenge my points:
1. GR is nothing but curved spacetime;
2. On curved spacetime, coordinates are not the accurate values of spatial distance or temporal interval or spatial angle.
3. To have those accurate values we need to perform integration with metric form being integrand. However, I did not see anyone do so to achieve distance, or angle, or time interval on curved spacetime. Instead, people simply write r, t, \phi and assume they are distance, time, angle respectively.

I am driven crazy by this fact with which many great figures (Einstein, Hilbert, John Baez, Steve Carlip, Francis Everitt being associated.

You can not say spacetime is curved because you have the terminology with some quantities: metric, cutvature, covariance. For example, quantum mechanics uses distance, radius which do not mean we can have definite orbits of micro-particles!

Is there anyone answering my question??
You know flat space is nothing but:
ds^2=dx^2+dy^2

flat Minkowski spacetime is nothing but:
ds^2=-c^2dt^2+dx^2+dy^2+dz^2
where
ds=dx if dt=dy=dz=0
and
dT=cdt =c time if dx=dy=dz=0 where dT^2=-ds^2

curved spacetime is nothing but:
ds^2=-Ac^2dt^2+Bdx^2+Cdy^2+Ddz^2
where
ds=sqrt(B)dx if dt=dy=dz=0
and
dT=sqrt(A)dt = c time if dx=dy=dz=0 where dT^2=-ds^2
Therefore, t is not time because A varies with position on curved spacetime manifold.
 
  • #154
Kris Krogh said:
It's a good system. Without this redundancy, they would be in a bad situation now. They need be able to compare the outputs of multiple devices to correct errors. Two rotate one way, and two the other, but they all have the same axis of rotation. You can find this kind of information on the GP-B web site.
Thanks a lot Kris ! That's really interesting. I will check on the GP-B web site.

By the way, I have received the answer to my question from GP-B Web Site Curator: for the moment now, they got no "best value" for the frame-dragging effect.

Paul
 
  • #155
Hi Paul,

I emailed the same address in 1999, to ask when they expected to launch the probe. It was scheduled for that October, but everyone knew they were running way behind. The response was that they were on schedule, and maybe would move the launch ahead to July. (Nice creative touch.) They ended up launching in 2004.

If you believe they have no idea how this measurement compares to the expected frame dragging, you're as gullible as I've been about their scheduling of the launch, release of data and analysis. (These delays have hurt me badly.) You can't blame the GP-B people entirely, because politics and diplomacy are necessary to carry out a project like this.

Kris
 
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  • #156
Hi Kris,

Of course they probably know more than they say, but something sure, they won't give a "best value" for frame-dragging before they are ready to do so. Until they do, we can only speculate.

Paul
 
  • #157
LeBourdais said:
Hi Kris,

Of course they probably know more than they say, but something sure, they won't give a "best value" for frame-dragging before they are ready to do so. Until they do, we can only speculate.

Paul

If it is in conflict with GR, they will never dare give the central value for the frame dragging...which is dramatic since, if all experimentalists behave this way as soon as they get an anomaly...progress is hopeless!
However they can at least answer my simple questions to let us make up our proper mind, and take our own responsability of what we have to say about the result:
How did they obtain the East-West plot?, what was subtracted before?
What does the graph look like for other Gyros?

i didnt got any answer, but i was trying to reach Everitt himself. May be i should better try the email of the guy that has answered your question.
What is it?

cheers,

F H-C
 
  • #158
henryco said:
If it is in conflict with GR, they will never dare give the central value for the frame dragging...which is dramatic since, if all experimentalists behave this way as soon as they get an anomaly...progress is hopeless!
Salut Fred,

Do you mean to say that they would have spent 800 millions dollars to send GP-B in space with the intent of not giving the results if these were contradictory with GR ? :confused:

henryco said:
i didnt got any answer, but i was trying to reach Everitt himself. May be i should better try the email of the guy that has answered your question.
What is it?

There is no secret about it, it's the e-mail address provided on GP-B Web site: www@relgyro.stanford.edu
The person that answered to me is the Web Site Curator.

Take it easy Fred :wink:

Friendly,

Paul
 
  • #159
Preliminary Frame Dragging "Glimpse"

I am posting from the APS meeting in Jacksonville.
You can see the preliminary result that was presented here,
with lots and lots of caveats,
by going to the GPb Homepage,
http://einstein.stanford.edu/index.html
and clicking on poster L1.00028,
Gravity Probe B Science Data Analysis: Filtering Strategy.
The result is called
"Glimpses of Frame Dragging"
and is in the bottom right quadrant of the poster.
One "glimpse" differs from GR by about two sigma,
but everything is still preliminary,
including the size of the sigma,
which is of order 10 mas/y
i.e. milliarcseconds per year.
I believe this particular "glimpse" is based on about 40 days data from one of the gyros.
Also, they have not yet unblinded themselves from the improved drift of the guidestar.
However, they still hope/expect to reduce their sigma to 1 or 2 mas/y by December.
Francis said there may be a small hint of a difference with GR,
but it is still much too early to talk about this seriously.
Jim Graber
 
  • #160
jgraber said:
I am posting from the APS meeting in Jacksonville.
You can see the preliminary result that was presented here,
with lots and lots of caveats,
by going to the GPb Homepage,
http://einstein.stanford.edu/index.html
and clicking on poster L1.00028,
Gravity Probe B Science Data Analysis: Filtering Strategy.
The result is called
"Glimpses of Frame Dragging"
and is in the bottom right quadrant of the poster.
One "glimpse" differs from GR by about two sigma,
but everything is still preliminary,
including the size of the sigma,
which is of order 10 mas/y
i.e. milliarcseconds per year.
I believe this particular "glimpse" is based on about 40 days data from one of the gyros.
Also, they have not yet unblinded themselves from the improved drift of the guidestar.
However, they still hope/expect to reduce their sigma to 1 or 2 mas/y by December.
Francis said there may be a small hint of a difference with GR,
but it is still much too early to talk about this seriously.
Jim Graber

Thank you very much for these informations...the problem is that i was not able to understand these plots mainly because of the bad resolution in the scanned axis...i still don't see what the axis in the ellipses plots represent:
the y-axis seems to be frame dragging , but the x-axis not sure: a north/south effect?
Does the expression "glimpses so far" mean that for the time being it was not possible to extract a continuous frame dragging behind those glimpses?
Are those glimpses the same resonance peeks shown in the east-west plot of the GP-B error poster?
Since you are in Jacksonville may be you have this information.

Thank you again



F H-C
 
  • #161
LeBourdais said:
Salut Fred,

Do you mean to say that they would have spent 800 millions dollars to send GP-B in space with the intent of not giving the results if these were contradictory with GR ? :confused:
Salut Paul,

Of course not... and i apologize. But it's too frustrating for me not
to attend the APS conference and i have difficulties to correctly interpret
the information given on the posters...
LeBourdais said:
Take it easy Fred :wink:

Friendly,

Paul

You are right Paul

amiclt,

Fred
 
  • #162
cosmopot said:
people simply write r, t, \phi and assume they are distance, time, angle respectively
but no one assumes that they are same distance, time, angle as in flat Minkowski spacetime, or do they?
 
  • #163
henryco,
the other axis is the geodetic effect.
The center of the largest ellipse is close to the expected GR value.
Jim Graber
 
  • #164
jgraber said:
henryco,
the other axis is the geodetic effect.
The center of the largest ellipse is close to the expected GR value.
Jim Graber

OK but as far as i know frame dragging must be continuous, not only happen from time to time as isolated glimpses (or did i miss something? somebody can confirm or invalidate this?)...otherwise this has nothing to do with GR frame dragging. What on Earth does this glimpse mean? Once we admit that this measurement is very preliminary and that no one should draw conclusion about it, there should be no problem for the experimentalist to answer this simple question: what does glimpse mean here? does it mean that from time to time there appears to be a short time burst of frame dragging (june 2006...) and that nothing is detected in between two such manifestations so far?
or is this glimpse simply due to the observer selection of a short period of time?
The first is the interpretation i must take the more serious since otherwise i would not be able to understand the question "why glimpses so far?". Moreover i understand in this case why their dominant error comes from the resonance peeks shown in the back/left plot in the error poster since such peeks can really mimic a momentaneous burst of frame dragging but obviously not a constant drift rate. If you are still in Jacksonville may be can you ask some member of the GP-B team these questions...my emails are never answered! what on Earth is going on? am i a plague-stricken?

Best regards and thank you for your help if you can get this information/confirmation.

F H-C
 
  • #165
The fractional data is due to two things: 1 They are not yet done analyzing it.
2. The spacecraft shut down briefly nine times during the eleven months of science data taking.
they are working on "stitching it together."
Best.
Jim Graber
 
  • #166
jgraber said:
Francis said there may be a small hint of a difference with GR,
but it is still much too early to talk about this seriously.
Jim Graber

Hi Jim,

Thanks very much for the information! Does the possible small hint Francis mentioned refer to frame dragging specifically? Also, do you have any sense whether this is in the direction of a larger effect, or smaller than expected?

As F H-C mentioned, on the two charts of the modeled Gyro 3 torque, we can't read any of the labels or numbers on the axes, or the other fine print. Can you fill us in? Also, do the ellipses indicate bounds on possible values?

Best wishes,

Kris Krogh
 
  • #167
Kris Krogh said:
As F H-C mentioned, on the two charts of the modeled Gyro 3 torque, we can't read any of the labels or numbers on the axes, or the other fine print.
Hi Kris,

If we look at the upper chart ("Torque Modeling Example : Motion of Gyroscope 3"), the dashed line is referred to as the "estimated relativistic motion" and it is clearly not flat. Therefore, whatever the numbers on the axes, I guess we can conclude that their "best value" for frame-dragging is not zero. Am I missing something ?

Paul
 
  • #169
LeBourdais said:
Hi Kris,

If we look at the upper chart ("Torque Modeling Example : Motion of Gyroscope 3"), the dashed line is referred to as the "estimated relativistic motion" and it is clearly not flat. Therefore, whatever the numbers on the axes, I guess we can conclude that their "best value" for frame-dragging is not zero. Am I missing something ?

Paul
hi paul

I would say:
1) it depends if the y-axis actually shows a pure east-west deviation, doest it (i can't decode the y-scale)?
2) even an actual east-west effect can have another origin than frame dragging (for example if we are in the vicinity of resonance peeks as shown in the error poster)...
3) The latter remark is reinforced if the (even preliminary) fitted drift rate is at several sigmas from GR prediction! If i now decode well the scales on the "glimpses plot" there are four glimpses at respectivily and approximately 2,3,8,8 standard deviations from the GR prediction !

Cheers,

Fred
 
  • #170
Hi Paul,

You have a point there, at least as far as this particular graph is concerned. I contacted the web page curator, and I think she'll put up a more readable version of this poster for us tomorrow.Magnetar,

That article says the geodetic effect of general relativity has been measured. But that's already been measured more accurately in other ways. The important one for me is frame dragging. They say Gravity Probe B hasn't measured that yet.
 
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  • #171
Hi everyone,
Sorry I can only post on coffee breaks when I am near the APS temporary hotspot. As I understand the "glimpses" each ellipse is a one sigma radius, and GR is very near the center of the earliest, crudest glimpse, and about two radii (i.e. approx two sigma) from the smallest, latest "glimpse", which is still based on a very limited amount of not yet fully processed data. As I understand it, the data in that plot are total motions, including nonrelativistic effects as well as the two GR effects. The speakers mentione three or four of order 40-80 mas/y total that add to the Geodetic Effect and at least one of order 40mas/y that adds to the Frame Dragging Effect. Because of these additions, the GR prediction is offset from the values usually quoted. The values on the "glimpse" chart have minus signs and increase in absolute value downward and to the left. They increase (or decrease) by 20 per grid line and the central values are 80 for the vertical (Frame Dragging) axis and 6580 for the horizontal (Geodetic) axis. The latest "Glimpse" is slightly offset in the direction of larger values, so IF you take it at face value, which is wildly over optimistic in my opinion, it would indicate that both effects are slightly larger than the GR prediction by about 10 mas/y compared to 6600 and 40. However, there will be new, much more reliable numbers in December or so, and the only sensible course in my opinion is to wait until then. remember, there are systematic as well as statistical errors, and the experiment is quoting their current overall sigma as 90-100 mas/y. This is small compared to the Geodetic effect, but totally swamps the Frame Dragging effect. They say the Geodetic effect is totally obvious from the rawish data, but the Frame Dragging Effect must be dug out of the noise. Remember, they found two major unexpected noise sources, and for several months were afraid that they would not be able to report any frame dragging result. It is only because of the large amount of redundancy in the data and the fact that the two GR effects and the two unexpected noise sources have four different mathematical characteristics that they expect to be able to recover something close to the originally expected accuracy.
Jim
 
  • #172
Thank you very much Jim ! It gives me a better picture of what's going on.

Paul
 
  • #173
Jim,

Thanks very much for your insights! That all seems to add up. Would it be possible to confirm with someone there from GP-B that the best of this data would hint at a slightly larger than expected frame-dragging effect? (If it hints at anything.)

Best wishes,

Kris
 
  • #174
I have just returned from the APS Meeting at Jacksonville and a holiday in Florida.

As has been well discussed the first results have verified the GR geodetic prediction to 1% but there is no handle on the frame-dragging prediction, basically because unexpected signals so far swamp it, except for 'glimpses'.

By the end of the year the correct removal of these effects will give a robust reading to both precessions.

The running now stands:

  1. Einstein's General Relativity(GR)
  2. Brans-Dicke theory (BD)
  3. Barber's Self Creation Cosmology (SCC),
  4. Moffat's Nonsymmetric Gravitational Theory (NGT),
  5. Hai-Long Zhao's Mass Variance SR Theory (MVSR),
  6. Stanley Robertson's Newtonian Gravity Theory (NG),
  7. Junhao & Xiang's Flat Space-Time Theory (FST).
  8. R. L. Collin's Mass-Metric Relativity (MMR) and
  9. F. Henry-Couannier's Dark Gravity Theory (DG).
  10. Alexander and Yunes' prediction for the Chern-Simons gravity theory (CS).
  11. Kris Krogh's Wave Gravity Theory (WG)
  12. Hongya Liu & J. M. Overduin prediction of the http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/journal/issues/ApJ/v538n1/50681/50681.text.html?erFrom=5252751197746712308Guest#sc8 gravity theory (KK).
  13. Kerr's Planck Scale Gravity: now accepted for publication Predictions of Experimental Results from a Gravity Theory (PSG)

The following are still in the running:

GPB Geodetic precession (North-South)
1. GR = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
2. BD = [itex](3\omega + 4)/(3\omega + 6)[/itex] 6.6144 arcsec/yr. where now [itex]\omega[/itex] >60.
4. NGT = 6.6144 - a small [itex]\sigma[/itex] correction arcsec/yr.
6. NG = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
9. DG = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
10. CS = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
11. WG = 6.6144 arcsec/yr.
12. KK = (1 + b/6 - 3b2 + ...) 6.6144 arcsec/yr. where 0 < b < 0.07.

We await the GPB gravitomagnetic frame dragging precession (East-West) result.

1. GR = 0.0409 arcsec/yr.
2. BD = [itex](2\omega + 3)/(2\omega + 4)[/itex] 0.0409 arcsec/yr.
4. NGT = 0.0409 arcsec/yr.
6. NG = 0.0102 arcsec/yr.
9. DG = 0.0000 arcsec/yr.
10. CS = 0.0409 arcsec/yr. + CS correction
11. WG = 0.0000 arcsec/yr.
12. KK = 0.0409 arcsec/yr.Those that have fallen by the wayside:

3. SCC = 4.4096 arcsec/yr.
5. MVSR = 0.0 arcsec/yr.
7. FST = 4.4096 arcsec/yr.
8. MMR = -6.56124 arcsec/yr.
13. PSG = 0.0000 arcsec/yr.

Garth
 
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  • #175
Garth said:
As has been well discussed the first results have verified the GR geodetic prediction to 1% but there is no handle on the frame-dragging prediction, basically because unexpected signals so far swamp it, except for 'glimpses'.

By the end of the year the correct removal of these effects will give a robust reading to both precessions.
Hi Garth,

Thank you for this status.

Sorry for your theory.

Best wishes
Paul
 

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