643 research outputs found
On the Measurement of the Lense-Thirring effect Using the Nodes of the LAGEOS Satellites in reply to "On the reliability of the so-far performed tests for measuring the Lense-Thirring effect with the LAGEOS satellites" by L. Iorio
In this paper, we provide a detailed description of our recent analysis and
determination of the frame-dragging effect obtained using the nodes of the
satellites LAGEOS and LAGEOS 2, in reply to the paper "On the reliability of
the so-far performed tests for measuring the Lense-Thirring effect with the
LAGEOS satellites" by L. IorioComment: Added: the precise references to the the ArXiv papers of L. Iorio:
  gr-qc/0411024 v9 19 Apr 2005 and gr-qc/0411084 v5 19 Apr 2005, explicitly
  containing his proposal to use the mean anomal
Measuring the relativistic perigee advance with Satellite Laser Ranging
One of the most famous classical tests of General Relativity is the
gravitoelectric secular advance of the pericenter of a test body in the
gravitational field of a central mass. In this paper we explore the possibility
of performing a measurement of the gravitoelectric pericenter advance in the
gravitational field of the Earth by analyzing the laser-ranged data to some
existing, or proposed, laser-ranged geodetic satellites. At the present level
of knowledge of various error sources, the relative precision obtainable with
the data from LAGEOS and LAGEOS II, suitably combined, is of the order of
. Nevertheless, these accuracies could sensibly be improved in the
near future when the new data on the terrestrial gravitational field from the
CHAMP and GRACE missions will be available. The use of the perigee of LARES
(LAser RElativity Satellite), in the context of a suitable combination of
orbital residuals including also LAGEOS II, should further raise the precision
of the measurement. As a secondary outcome of the proposed experiment, with the
so obtained value of \ppn and with \et=4\beta-\gamma-3 from Lunar Laser
Ranging it could be possible to obtain an estimate of the PPN parameters
 and  at the  level.Comment: LaTex2e, 14 pages, no figures, 2 tables. To appear in Classical and
  Quantum Gravit
On a new observable for measuring the Lense-Thirring effect with Satellite Laser Ranging
In this paper we present a rather extensive error budget for the difference
of the perigees of a pair of supplementary SLR satellites aimed to the
detection of the Lense-Thirring effect.Comment: LaTex2e, 14 pages, 1 table, no figures. Some changes and additions to
  the abstract, Introduction and Conclusions. References updated, typos
  corrected. Equation corrected. To appear in General Relativity and
  Gravitatio
The impact of the new Earth gravity model EIGEN-CG03C on the measurement of the Lense-Thirring effect with some existing Earth satellites
The impact of the latest combined CHAMP/GRACE/terrestrial measurements Earth
gravity model EIGEN-CG03C on the measurement of the Lense-Thirring effect with
some linear combinations of the nodes of some of the existing Earth's
artificial satellites is presented. The 1-sigma upper bound of the systematic
error in the node-node LAGEOS-LAGEOS II combination is 3.9% (4% with
EIGEN-GRACE02S, \sim 6% with EIGEN-CG01C and \sim 9% with GGM02S), while it is
1$% for the node-only LAGEOS-LAGEOS II-Ajisai-Jason-1 combination (2% with
EIGEN-GRACE02S, 1.6% with EIGEN-CG01C and 2.7% with GGM02S).Comment: LaTex2e, 7 pages, 16 references, 1 table. It is an update of the
  impact of the even zonal harmonics of the geopotential on the Lense-Thirring
  effect with the EIGEN-GGM03C Earth gravity model publicly released on May 11
  2005. Typos corrected. Reference added. To appear in General Relativity and
  Gravitation, March 200
The impact of the new CHAMP and GRACE Earth gravity models on the measurement of the general relativistic Lense--Thirring effect with the LAGEOS and LAGEOS II satellites
Among the effects predicted by the General Theory of Relativity for the
orbital motion of a test particle, the post-Newtonian gravitomagnetic
Lense-Thirring effect is very interesting and, up to now, there is not yet an
undisputable experimental direct test of it. To date, the data analysis of the
orbits of the existing geodetic LAGEOS and LAGEOS II satellites has yielded a
test of the Lense-Thirring effect with a claimed accuracy of 20%-30%. According
to some scientists such estimates could be optimistic. Here we wish to discuss
the improvements obtainable in this measurement, in terms of reliability of the
evaluation of the systematic error and reduction of its magnitude, due to the
new CHAMP and GRACE Earth gravity models.Comment: LaTex2e, 6 pages, no figures, no tables. Paper presented at 2nd CHAMP
  science meeting, Potsdam, 1-4 September 200
Measuring the Lense-Thirring precession using a second Lageos satellite
A complete numerical simulation and error analysis was performed for the proposed experiment with the objective of establishing an accurate assessment of the feasibility and the potential accuracy of the measurement of the Lense-Thirring precession. Consideration was given to identifying the error sources which limit the accuracy of the experiment and proposing procedures for eliminating or reducing the effect of these errors. Analytic investigations were conducted to study the effects of major error sources with the objective of providing error bounds on the experiment. The analysis of realistic simulated data is used to demonstrate that satellite laser ranging of two Lageos satellites, orbiting with supplemental inclinations, collected for a period of 3 years or more, can be used to verify the Lense-Thirring precession. A comprehensive covariance analysis for the solution was also developed
Geodesic motion in General Relativity: LARES in Earth's gravity
According to General Relativity, as distinct from Newtonian gravity, motion
under gravity is treated by a theory that deals, initially, only with test
particles. At the same time, satellite measurements deal with extended bodies.
We discuss the correspondence between geodesic motion in General Relativity and
the motion of an extended body by means of the Ehlers-Geroch theorem, and in
the context of the recently launched LAser RElativity Satellite (LARES). Being
possibly the highest mean density orbiting body in the Solar system, this
satellite provides the best realization of a test particle ever reached
experimentally and provides a unique possibility for testing the predictions of
General Relativity.Comment: 4 pages, 1 imag
Finally, results from Gravity Probe-B
Nearly fifty years after its inception, the Gravity Probe B satellite mission
delivers the first measurements of how a spinning gyroscope precesses in the
gravitational warping of spacetime.Comment: A Viewpoint article, published in Physics 4, 43 (2011), available at
  http://physics.aps.org/articles/v4/43 Submitted to the arXiv by permission of
  the American Physical Societ
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