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On the impact of the atmospheric drag on the LARES mission
- Source :
- Acta Phys. Polon.B41:753-765,2010
- Publication Year :
- 2008
-
Abstract
- The goal of the recently approved space-based LARES mission is to measure the general relativistic Lense-Thirring effect in the gravitational field of the spinning Earth at a repeatedly claimed 1% accuracy by combining its node Omega with those of the existing LAGEOS and LAGEOS II laser-ranged satellites. In this paper we show that, in view of the lower altitude of LARES (h=1450 km) with respect to LAGEOS and LAGEOS II (h\approx 6000 km), the cross-coupling between the effect of the atmospheric drag, both neutral and charged, on the inclination of LARES and its classical node precession due to the Earth's oblateness may induce a 3-9% year^-1 systematic bias on the total relativistic precession. Since its extraction from the data will take about 5-10 years, such a perturbing effect may degrade the total accuracy of the test, especially in view of the large uncertainties in modeling the drag force.<br />Comment: Latex2e, 19 pages, 2 tables, no figures. Final version to appear in Acta Physica Polonica (AcPP).
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Journal :
- Acta Phys. Polon.B41:753-765,2010
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.0809.3564
- Document Type :
- Working Paper