150 research outputs found
Inclined asymmetric librations in exterior resonances
Librational motion in celestial mechanics is generally associated with the
existence of stable resonant configurations and signified by the existence of
stable periodic solutions and oscillation of critical (resonant) angles. When
such an oscillation takes place around a value different than 0 or , the
libration is called asymmetric. In the context of the planar circular
restricted three-body problem (CRTBP), asymmetric librations have been
identified for the exterior mean-motion resonances (MMRs) 1:2, 1:3 etc. as well
as for co-orbital motion (1:1). In exterior MMRs the massless body is the outer
one. In this paper, we study asymmetric librations in the 3-dimensional space.
We employ the computational approach of Markellos (1978) and compute families
of asymmetric periodic orbits and their stability. Stable, asymmetric periodic
orbits are surrounded in phase space by domains of initial conditions which
correspond to stable evolution and librating resonant angles. Our computations
were focused on the spatial circular restricted three-body model of the
Sun-Neptune-TNO system (TNO= trans-Neptunian object). We compare our results
with numerical integrations of observed TNOs, which reveal that some of them
perform 1:2-resonant, inclined asymmetric librations. For the stable 1:2 TNOs
librators, we find that their libration seems to be related with the vertically
stable planar asymmetric orbits of our model, rather than the 3-dimensional
ones found in the present study.Comment: Accepted for publication in CeMD
Vertical instability and inclination excitation during planetary migration
We consider a two-planet system, which migrates under the influence of
dissipative forces that mimic the effects of gas-driven (Type II) migration. It
has been shown that, in the planar case, migration leads to resonant capture
after an evolution that forces the system to follow families of periodic
orbits. Starting with planets that differ slightly from a coplanar
configuration, capture can, also, occur and, additionally, excitation of
planetary inclinations has been observed in some cases. We show that excitation
of inclinations occurs, when the planar families of periodic orbits, which are
followed during the initial stages of planetary migration, become vertically
unstable. At these points, {\em vertical critical orbits} may give rise to
generating stable families of periodic orbits, which drive the evolution
of the migrating planets to non-coplanar motion. We have computed and present
here the vertical critical orbits of the and resonances, for
various values of the planetary mass ratio. Moreover, we determine the limiting
values of eccentricity for which the "inclination resonance" occurs.Comment: Accepted for publication in Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical
Astronom
Medium Earth Orbit dynamical survey and its use in passive debris removal
The Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) region hosts satellites for navigation,
communication, and geodetic/space environmental science, among which are the
Global Navigation Satellites Systems (GNSS). Safe and efficient removal of
debris from MEO is problematic due to the high cost for maneuvers needed to
directly reach the Earth (reentry orbits) and the relatively crowded GNSS
neighborhood (graveyard orbits). Recent studies have highlighted the
complicated secular dynamics in the MEO region, but also the possibility of
exploiting these dynamics, for designing removal strategies. In this paper, we
present our numerical exploration of the long-term dynamics in MEO, performed
with the purpose of unveiling the set of reentry and graveyard solutions that
could be reached with maneuvers of reasonable DV cost. We simulated the
dynamics over 120-200 years for an extended grid of millions of fictitious MEO
satellites that covered all inclinations from 0 to 90deg, using non-averaged
equations of motion and a suitable dynamical model that accounted for the
principal geopotential terms, 3rd-body perturbations and solar radiation
pressure (SRP). We found a sizeable set of usable solutions with reentry times
that exceed ~40years, mainly around three specific inclination values: 46deg,
56deg, and 68deg; a result compatible with our understanding of MEO secular
dynamics. For DV <= 300 m/s (i.e., achieved if you start from a typical GNSS
orbit and target a disposal orbit with e<0.3), reentry times from GNSS
altitudes exceed ~70 years, while low-cost (DV ~= 5-35 m/s) graveyard orbits,
stable for at lest 200 years, are found for eccentricities up to e~0.018. This
investigation was carried out in the framework of the EC-funded "ReDSHIFT"
project.Comment: 39 pages, 23 figure
Explaining why the uranian satellites have equatorial prograde orbits despite the large planetary obliquity
We show that the existence of prograde equatorial satellites is consistent with a collisional tilting scenario for Uranus. In fact, if the planet was surrounded by a proto-satellite disk at the time of the tilting and a massive ring of material was temporarily placed inside the Roche radius of the planet by the collision, the proto-satellite disk would have started to precess incoherently around the equator of the planet, up to a distance greater than that of Oberon. Collisional damping would then have collapsed it into a thin equatorial disk, from which the satellites eventually formed. The fact that the orbits of the satellites are prograde requires Uranus to have had a non-negligible initial obliquity (comparable to that of Neptune) before it was finally tilted to 98°
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