Computing the Newtonian part of the precession of perihelia of Mercury?
Hi all,
I don't think Michel stated his goal very clearly; as I understand it, he recognizes that he already knows (from modern gtr textbooks) how to compute the
extra-Newtonian precession of the perihelia of Mercury, according to weak-field gtr, and appreciates that to model as well the perturbing effect of the presence of Jupiter (which provides a much larger contribution to the precession of the perihelia of Mercury than the tiny contribution from the de Sitter precession effect), he needs to compute this using the classical theory of perturbations in Newtonian gravitation, as independently developed by Le Verrier and Adams (following previous work by Lagrange), and then simply add the Newtonian and extra-Newtonian terms. (Modulo a tricky point discussed by Weinberg; note that in modern gtr textbooks one finds an
approximate solution of the equations for timelike geodesic in the
exact Schwarzschild vacuum solution, which evades the tricky point; Einstein's original computation used the weak-field solution and was not quite justified as he stated it in 1915.)
Furthermore, as I understand it, Michel is asking for historical references (to follow the development of the classical theory of perturbations in modeling the motion of the planets according to
Newtonian gravitation) and also textbook references (for learning to verify the computations in detail by himself), especially references freely available on the InterNet.
Michel,
lalbatros said:
I would be interrested by reading some original paper on the classical evaluation of the advance of the perihelion.
...
I would like to read the calculations by Le Verrier
I think that most likely you will need to do some library research. In a previous post in a recent thread, I already gave you some printed references (one historical reference plus books containing many further references). In particular, I gave a citation to a book by Le Verrier (in French) which you can probably find in a good research library.
It sounds like your real interest is however in learning how to perform a modern version of the Newtonian computations carried out by Le Verrier and Adams. Here too I strongly recommend that you find some good books; but I do mention web resources you can study below; these might provide helpful supplements as you study some good textbooks such as the three volume work by Hagihara. Then you can try to reproduce the Digital Orrery:
James Applegate, M. Douglas, Y. Gursel, P Hunter, C. Seitz, Gerald Jay Sussman, A digital orrery, in IEEE Transactions on Computers, C-34, No. 9, pp. 822-831, September 1985, reprinted in Lecture Notes in Physics #267, Springer Verlag, 1986.
James Applegate, M. Douglas, Y. Gursel, Gerald Jay Sussman, Jack Wisdom, The outer solar system for 200 million years, Astronomical Journal, 92, pp 176-194, July 1986, reprinted in Lecture Notes in Physics #267 -- Use of Supercomputers in Stellar Dynamics, Springer Verlag, 1986.
lalbatros said:
I found a few simplified models (see http://scitation.aip.org/vsearch/servlet/VerityServlet?KEY=AJPIAS&ONLINE=YES&smode=strresults&sort=chron&maxdisp=25&origquery=%28perihelion%29+&disporigquery=%28perihelion%29+&threshold=0&pjournals=&pyears=&possible1=perihelion&possible1zone=article&possible3=mercury&possible3zone=multi&bool3=and&OUTLOG=NO&viewabs=AJPIAS&key=DISPLAY&docID=1&page=1&chapter=0&aqs="
I'm impressed that you even know what the Runge-Lenz vector is!
By the way, Michel (and pervect, if you are reading this post!), this notion is best understood in terms of Lie's theory of symmetry of systems of differential equations; the Runge-Lenz vector naturally arises as a dynamical symmetry in the Kepler system; see Stephani,
Differential Equations: Their Solution Using Symmetries for a clear discussion. The point is this: as Stephani shows, in the two body problem (in Newtonian gravitation!) the Runge-Lenz vector is
invariant. But in the three body problem (Sun, Mercury, Jupiter) it is not, and this models the precession effect you seek.
lalbatros said:
It is necessary to:
- either go back to the original calculations
- or find modern references on the exact calculations
It is indeed ironic that these days it is probably more challenging to learn the relevant theory of perturbations for Newtonian astrodynamics than the classic computation of the de Sitter effect in the context of linearized (or weak-field) gtr!
Consider a less ambitious program than trying to reproduce something like the Digital Orrery (see
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/week107.html for some citations, and see also www.gifford.co.uk/~principia/orrery.htm) for an alleged implementation which I haven't checked out very thoroughly, but which you can play with on-line):
Following up on a problem in the
Problem Book in Relativity and Gravitation by Lightman et al., I computed the effect of a solar bulge using weak-field gtr, and reported the following results:
(Oops, too long.. I'll quote this in a followup)
This might interest you because, as you will recall, some decades ago the question briefly arose whether a previously unrecognized solar bulge might account for some of the precession, in which case gtr would have turned out to agree with experiment "only by accident". Dicke used this to argue that the Brans-Dicke scalar-tensor theory should be used instead; see the discussion and citations in MTW.
That is, in the quoted post (see below), I describe the result of my computation of the precession, in the case of a test particle orbiting an isolated massive object possessing a nonzero quadrupole moment, and compared this with the de Sitter effect. The point was that the two effects scale very differently with radius, so that one cannot simultaneously fit models to the observed motion of Mercury, Mars, the Earth, asteroids, various pulsars, and so on, by assuming very solar bugles plus Brans-Dicke gravitation (which has an extra parameter which must be chosen once and for all).
Note that in the quoted post, I stress that the inquirer had spotted an instability in his own simulation, which was due to the fact that he was treating the test particle motion via an approximate equation which is only valid for a small number of orbits; the exact solution of the geodesic equation in the Schwarzschild spacetime would not exhibit rapid inspiralling for a quasi-Keplerian orbit. Regarding the possible effects of gravitational radiation, these turn out to be neglible for the case of Mercury in comparision to the de Sitter effect.