|
|
|
|
|
by TeMPOraL
140 days ago
|
|
We know they do. An orbit is a mathematical object, and elliptical orbits only exist in universes that have exactly two objects with mass in them. Add another object, even far away, and as far as we know[0] we no longer even have a closed-form description of resulting motion patterns. And our universe has tons of matter with gravitational mass everywhere, few other types of interaction beyond gravity, and a vacuum that just doesn't want to stay empty. -- [0] - Not sure if this was mathematically proven, or merely remains not disproven. |
|
Actual orbits being slightly off ellipses isn't what I meant.