We summarize a laser-ranged satellite test of frame-dragging, a prediction of
General Relativity, and then concentrate on the estimate of thermal thrust, an
important perturbation affecting the accuracy of the test. The frame dragging
study analysed 3.5 years of data from the LARES satellite and a longer period
of time for the two LAGEOS satellites. Using the gravity field GGM05S obtained
via the Grace mission, which measures the Earth's gravitational field, the
prediction of General Relativity is confirmed with a 1-σ formal error of
0.002, and a systematic error of 0.05. The result for the value of the frame
dragging around the Earth is μ = 0.994, compared to μ = 1 predicted by
General Relativity. The thermal force model assumes heat flow from the sun
(visual) and from Earth (IR) to the satellite core and to the fused silica
reflectors on the satellite, and reradiation into space. For a roughly current
epoch (days 1460 - 1580 after launch) we calculate an average along-track drag
of -0.50 pm/s2.Comment: 6 pages, multiple figures in Proceedings of Metrology for Aerospace
(MetroAeroSpace), 2016 IEE