On the lack of any statistically significant effect of Mercury on the solar wind velocity near the orbit of the Earth
The notion that Mercury modulates considerably the solar wind velocity at the orbit of the Earth (Nikulin, 2014) is erroneous. It is not grounded in experimental data. Quantitative estimates also suggest that this effect should be negligible at such large distances from a planet that small. The asse...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Solar system research 2016-11, Vol.50 (6), p.447-450 |
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description | The notion that Mercury modulates considerably the solar wind velocity at the orbit of the Earth (Nikulin, 2014) is erroneous. It is not grounded in experimental data. Quantitative estimates also suggest that this effect should be negligible at such large distances from a planet that small. The assertion that this effect may be used in practice to improve the accuracy of prediction of the solar wind velocity (Nikulin, 2014) is unfounded as well: no credible observational and theoretical evidence in favor of it has been offered. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1134/S003809461606006X |
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subjects | Analysis Astronomy Astrophysics and Astroparticles Astrophysics and Cosmology Earth orbits Estimates Mercury Mercury (planet) Observations and Techniques Physics Physics and Astronomy Planetology Planets Solar physics Solar system Solar wind velocity Studies Sun Wind speed |
title | On the lack of any statistically significant effect of Mercury on the solar wind velocity near the orbit of the Earth |
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