INVERSE N-BODY PROBLEM

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The solution of the two-body gravitational problem led to the discovery of Newton's law of gravitation F = GMm/r^2. The solution of the inverse two-body problem (Bertrand problem) also leads to Newton's law of gravitation. However, the solution of the direct and inverse two-body problems does not provide a complete description of gravity. The law of gravitation for N bodies is missing. The fundamental law of gravitation for N bodies has not been discovered. The obstacle was the unsolved gravitational problem of N bodies. The inverse problem of N-bodies has not been studied in physics. Here we present a new method for finding the law of gravitational force for N bodies. The method is based on reducing the gravitational problem of N bodies to the two-body problem, where the central body is a system of N bodies. The problem of an N-body system is the inverse problem of the N-body problem. This is the problem of finding the law of gravitational force from the known integral characteristics of the N-body system. The solution of the inverse problem of N bodies gives a new law of gravitation F = (mc^2)√Ʌ. Instead of the gravitational constant G, the new law of gravity includes the cosmological constant Ʌ. The new law of gravity F = (mc^2)√Ʌ allows us to overcome the limitations inherent in Newton's law of gravity F = GMm/r^2 and leads to a new law of universal gravitation.

Article activity feed