San K said:
can you provide some examples of the non-relativistic things that had to be subtracted out? ...just curious
I came across an article from 2008 detailing the problems encountered in analysing the data of the
http://spectrum.ieee.org/aerospace/space-flight/the-gravity-probe-b-bailout/0" mission
The Gravity probe B mission had two objectives:
- Corroboration of the geodetic effect
- Corroboration of frame dragging.
The second is far more demanding than the first, because it's a much smaller effect.
I gather from that article that in 2008 NASA pretty much pulled the plug for the data-mining efforts to show that frame dragging had occurred. The geodetic effect was far less of an achievement; it had already been confirmed with other means (but not as directly as in the Gravity probe B setup)
So to stop funding the data-mining short for the frame-dragging effect is a significant decision.
Only this year, 2011, has the data analysis team announced final results are ready.What was anticipated, and planned for, was a classical phenomenon called polhode motion. The polhode motion was expected to repeat very consistently. Anything that repeats very consistently can be subtracted in a relatively straightforward manner. However, the polhode motion decayed over the duration of the mission, making it much more challenging to model.
It has become a challenging data-mining effort. Other effects are far bigger, to subtract them they have to be modeled to a very high precision.
The criticism is that with such extensive data-mining there is opportunity for "massaging" the data.
In a corroboration effort it's tempting to discard preliminary results that are unfavorable, and go with decisions that yield the desired corroboration. There are always judgement calls. It becomes very difficult to see whether the judgement calls are biased. That casts doubt on the final resultsSources of specific information:
A PDF about
http://einstein.stanford.edu/highlights/GyroPolhodeMotion.pdf"
A webpage, written by a member of the data analysis team, about
http://einstein.stanford.edu/highlights/hl_polhode_story.html"