排序方式: 共有15条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
11.
Slava G. Turyshev William Farr William M. Folkner André R. Girerd Hamid Hemmati Thomas W. Murphy Jr James G. Williams John J. Degnan 《Experimental Astronomy》2010,28(2-3):209-249
Phobos Laser Ranging (PLR) is a concept for a space mission designed to advance tests of relativistic gravity in the solar system. PLR’s primary objective is to measure the curvature of space around the Sun, represented by the Eddington parameter γ, with an accuracy of two parts in 107, thereby improving today’s best result by two orders of magnitude. Other mission goals include measurements of the time-rate-of-change of the gravitational constant, G and of the gravitational inverse square law at 1.5-AU distances—with up to two orders-of-magnitude improvement for each. The science parameters will be estimated using laser ranging measurements of the distance between an Earth station and an active laser transponder on Phobos capable of reaching mm-level range resolution. A transponder on Phobos sending 0.25-mJ, 10-ps pulses at 1 kHz, and receiving asynchronous 1-kHz pulses from earth via a 12-cm aperture will permit links that even at maximum range will exceed a photon per second. A total measurement precision of 50 ps demands a few hundred photons to average to 1-mm (3.3 ps) range precision. Existing satellite laser ranging (SLR) facilities—with appropriate augmentation—may be able to participate in PLR. Since Phobos’ orbital period is about 8 h, each observatory is guaranteed visibility of the Phobos instrument every Earth day. Given the current technology readiness level, PLR could be started in 2011 for launch in 2016 for 3 yr of science operations. We discuss the PLR’s science objectives, instrument, and mission design. We also present the details of science simulations performed to support the mission’s primary objectives. 相似文献
12.
V. V. Turyshev 《Geochemistry International》2017,55(1):69-83
The paper presents original data on the K, U, and Th distribution over the areas of Jurassic and Early Cretaceous sedimentation basins on the Western Siberian Plate and on the distribution of natural radioactive elements in all major lithological–stratigraphic complexes and through the facies profile of the humid and arid sedimentation basins. These data can be utilized in lithological-facies analysis, reconstructions of sedimentation conditions, lithological and stratigraphic subdivision of stratigraphic sections, and in mapping boundaries between oil and gas complexes and assaying the hydrocarbon potential of the region. 相似文献
13.
S. G. Turyshev M. Shao K. L. Nordtvedt H. Dittus C. Laemmerzahl S. Theil C. Salomon S. Reynaud T. Damour U. Johann P. Bouyer P. Touboul B. Foulon O. Bertolami J. Páramos 《Experimental Astronomy》2009,27(1-2):27-60
The Laser Astrometric Test of Relativity (LATOR) is an experiment designed to test the metric nature of gravitation—a fundamental postulate of the Einstein’s general theory of relativity. The key element of LATOR is a geometric redundancy provided by the long-baseline optical interferometry and interplanetary laser ranging. By using a combination of independent time-series of gravitational deflection of light in the immediate proximity to the Sun, along with measurements of the Shapiro time delay on interplanetary scales (to a precision respectively better than 0.1 picoradians and 1 cm), LATOR will significantly improve our knowledge of relativistic gravity and cosmology. The primary mission objective is i) to measure the key post-Newtonian Eddington parameter γ with accuracy of a part in 109. $\frac{1}{2}(1-\gamma)$ is a direct measure for presence of a new interaction in gravitational theory, and, in its search, LATOR goes a factor 30,000 beyond the present best result, Cassini’s 2003 test. Other mission objectives include: ii) first measurement of gravity’s non-linear effects on light to ~0.01% accuracy; including both the traditional Eddington β parameter and also the spatial metric’s 2nd order potential contribution (never measured before); iii) direct measurement of the solar quadrupole moment J 2 (currently unavailable) to accuracy of a part in 200 of its expected size of ??10???7; iv) direct measurement of the “frame-dragging” effect on light due to the Sun’s rotational gravitomagnetic field, to 0.1% accuracy. LATOR’s primary measurement pushes to unprecedented accuracy the search for cosmologically relevant scalar-tensor theories of gravity by looking for a remnant scalar field in today’s solar system. We discuss the science objectives of the mission, its technology, mission and optical designs, as well as expected performance of this experiment. LATOR will lead to very robust advances in the tests of fundamental physics: this mission could discover a violation or extension of general relativity and/or reveal the presence of an additional long range interaction in the physical law. There are no analogs to LATOR; it is unique and is a natural culmination of solar system gravity experiments. 相似文献
14.
V. G. Turyshev 《Astronomy Letters》2009,35(4):215-234
We study the impact of relativistic gravitational deflection of light on the accuracy of future Space Interferometry Mission
(SIM). We estimate the deflection angles caused by the monopole, quadrupole and octupole components of gravitational fields
for a number of celestial bodies in the solar system. We observe that, in many cases, the magnitude of the corresponding effects
is significantly larger than the 1 μas accuracy expected from SIM. This fact argues for the development of a relativistic
observational model for the mission that would account for the influence of both static and time-varying effects of gravity
on light propagation. Results presented here are different from the ones obtained elsewhere by the fact that we specifically
account for the differential nature of the future SIM astrometric measurements. We also obtain an estimate for the accuracy
of possible determination of the Eddington’s parameter γ via SIM global astrometric campaign; we conclude that accuracy of ∼7 × 10−6 is achievable via measurements of deflection of light by solar gravity.
The article was translated by the authors. 相似文献
15.
Anna M. Nobili Gian Luca Comandi Suresh Doravari Donato Bramanti Rajeev Kumar Francesco Maccarrone Erseo Polacco Slava G. Turyshev Michael Shao John Lipa Hansjoerg Dittus Claus Laemmerzhal Achim Peters Jurgen Mueller C. S. Unnikrishnan Ian W. Roxburgh Alain Brillet Christian Marchal Jun Luo Jozef van der Ha Vadim Milyukov Valerio Iafolla David Lucchesi Paolo Tortora Paolo De Bernardis Federico Palmonari Sergio Focardi Dino Zanello Salvatore Monaco Giovanni Mengali Luciano Anselmo Lorenzo Iorio Zoran Knezevic 《Experimental Astronomy》2009,23(2):689-710
“Galileo Galilei” (GG) is a small satellite designed to fly in low Earth orbit with the goal of testing the Equivalence Principle—which
is at the basis of the General Theory of Relativity—to 1 part in 1017. If successful, it would improve current laboratory results by 4 orders of magnitude. A confirmation would strongly constrain
theories; proof of violation is believed to lead to a scientific revolution. The experiment design allows it to be carried
out at ambient temperature inside a small 1-axis stabilized satellite (250 kg total mass). GG is under investigation at Phase
A-2 level by ASI (Agenzia Spaziale Italiana) at Thales Alenia Space in Torino, while a laboratory prototype (known as GGG)
is operational at INFN laboratories in Pisa, supported by INFN (Istituto Nazionale di fisica Nucleare) and ASI. A final study
report will be published in 2009. 相似文献