You have a bizarre idea of what 'Lying' is, Tharkun.
Changing the actual text of what was posted so you can semantic whore, exactly how would that not be lying? Oh wait you were kidding, jerking my chain, or some other specious BS that disguises the fact you deliberately changed the initial statement so you could harp about definitions of the word "orbit".
Ah, you're going to whine and cry about me saying 'Goes around' instead of 'orbit'.
The obersvation is valid. Sketch the trajectories and they will "go around" the origin in respective frames of reference.
Never gets to the far side of Mars, IE, the section aimed at Jupiter and Saturn and such.
The far side of Mars in an Earth centered frame of reference behaves just like the far side of Earth in a Sol centered frame of reference i.e. the section of Earth aimed at Jupitor and such will revolve and bring itself into view.
At what point did I claim the center of mass for both is identical? Hrm, I didn't.
No, because their movements are dictated by their interaction with the barycenter of this system -note the complete lack of an 's' on the end of "barycenter" SN not only hasn't a clue about physics he doesn't know that refering to multiple barycenters requires the plural form
You state both planets' movements are dictated by interaction with a singular entity. That is still technicly wrong.
No it wouldn't, as it wouldn't take into account that orbits are slipping; the years are getting slowly shorter.
Kepler did it without having even Newtonian mechanics to work with. Numerical methods work given a long enough baseline and good enough data. A geocentric frame is terribly ugly calculations, but nothing a good computer can't handle.
It also wouldn't offer any useful predictive capabilities on changes with the real source of that movement, the barycenter.
Of course light pressure, solar wind, and external gravitation can all be ignored even though they have all demonstrated significant changes in certain systems
Here's another clue it's called the Einstein
Field Equation because you are working with a
tensor field. There is no single point that determines motion, it is a
continious effect. The barycenter model is an
approximation which is useful for certain problems, but not in and of itself wholly correct. For instance the barycenter model predicts certain 3-dimensional symmetries about the field which are not necessarily true, such as with trinary stars.
If you are talking about what is "real", which apparantly you have your own private meaning for, the motion is determined by a tensor field not a point effect, even the barycenter.
There will be tiny variations with each, but as anyone who is actually educated will tell you, the main source is the centre of mass.
The main source is the tensor field, but that is a bitch to work with so for many applications the barycenter appoximation is close enough no one gives a damn. However you seem to have a major hang up about what is "real" and the barycenter determinging motion isn't it.
'Some vague something'. Gods, you're a laugh a minute.
What is
invalid about saying in an Earth centered frame of reference Mars goes around, circumnavigates, does an ugly looking rotation about - whatever phrase you won't semantics whore - Earth?
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.