You then went with an entire post
(Post #14) about why, according to your math, that you should get the right answer. However, showing that you actually get the same answer as the observation, wasn't part of the post. So, you told us that it would be a couple of days, then you would get to it over the weekend, but as of today (26 December, 2011), you still haven't provided the answer for the binary pulsar 1913+16. That now comes to a total of 159 days. If the calculations in your idea can't provide a match of the observations, just say so and we can move on from there.
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There's more than one way to show an idea is wrong. Pointing out failures of logic or failures to match experimental or observational data is just as valid a posting method. Immature ideas usually have invalid support and/or the idea cannot provide a match to observations, both of which described your idea originally. And still applies to the match of observations. You provided a reference to a GRB paper you thought supported your idea. It didn't, as I pointed out, and you have now pulled that claim from your paper. You said you would be able to provide us with the values for the decrease in the orbital period for PSR 1913+16 in a couple of days, and then over a weekend, and its been over five months, and still no answer. So asking you to show proper results has shown your theory hasn't driven to a commonly accepted result, even as you continue to argue that other posters points are invalid.