Why didn't the supercomputer find possible orbits for bodies of slightly different masses? Because they can't exist.
"And yet we see the bumblebee CAN fly."Position + Motion + Perturbations => Ephemerides
Ephemerides + Spherical Geometry => Besselian Elements
Not patterns.
Thinking that proving a globe earth model isn't possible somehow proves the flat earth model correct is poor critical reasoning.
Thinking that the N-body problem somehow means ephemerides are "pattern-based" is poor critical reasoning.
Predictions of when, where, how long, type, swath are not only NOT pattern-based, they also only work within the spherical geometry of a globe earth. Unless, that is, you have a comparable model that can make similarly accurate predictions. I don't know how that can be possible when there isn't even a flat earth map.
Erroneously claiming predictions are pattern-based and that an expert in calculating the Besselian Elements of future (and past) solar eclipses is speaking nonsense and is not really applying spherical geometry in producing his outputs is not a logical way to defend a flat earth model. The first step ought to be to develop a flat earth model that can show some alternative success.
I grow so weary watching flat earth advocates taking the approach that "globebusting" somehow bolsters a flat earth argument, as if the flat earth stands in default if the globe is refuted. Adding misunderstanding and erroneous claims to the mix only makes it worse. I've stated my criticism of the wiki article. I'll bow out.