A HERO for general relativity
Abstract
HERO (Highly Eccentric Relativity Orbiter) is a space-based mission concept aimed to perform several tests of post-Newtonian gravity around the Earth with a preferably drag-free spacecraft moving along a highly elliptical path fixed in its plane undergoing a relatively fast secular precession. We considered two possible scenarios: a fast, 4-hr orbit with high perigee height of 1,047\,km, and a slow, 21-hr path with a low perigee height of 642\,km. HERO may detect, for the first time, the post-Newtonian orbital effects induced by the mass quadrupole moment J2 of the Earth which affects the semimajor axis a via a secular trend of 4-12\,cm\,yr-1, depending on the orbital configuration. Recently, the secular decay of the semimajor axis of the passive satellite LARES was measured with an error as little as 0.7\,cm\,yr-1. Also the post-Newtonian spin dipole (Lense-Thirring) and mass monopole (Schwarzschild) effects could be tested to a high accuracy depending on the level of compensation of the non-gravitational perturbations. Moreover, the large eccentricity of the orbit would allow to constrain several long-range modified models of gravity and to accurately measure the gravitational red-shift as well. Each of the six Keplerian orbital elements could be individually monitored to extract the GJ2/c2 signature, or they could be suitably combined in order to disentangle the post-Newtonian effect(s) of interest from the competing mismodeled Newtonian secular precessions induced by the zonal harmonic multipoles J of the geopotential. In the latter case, the systematic uncertainty due to the current formal errors σJ of a recent global Earth's gravity field model are better than 1\% for all the post-Newtonian effects considered, with a peak of 10-7 for the Schwarzschild-like shifts. [Abridged]
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