Anomalous accelerations in spacecraft flybys of the Earth

In summary, the suggestion is a fifth force to counter these anomalies is this generally excepted?This is reminiscent of the Pioneer Anomaly. There were similar tiny deviations of the path of the Pioneer spacecraft from what was predicted. Dozens (maybe hundreds?) of papers were written speculating that it was due to modifications of gravity, MOND, and whatever else you might want to invent. In the end, careful thermal modeling of the spacecraft showed that the effect was due to radiation pressure from the asymmetric radiation of the heat from the Radioisotope Thermal Generator.
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wolram
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The suggestion is a fifth force to counter these anomalies is this generally excepted?

arXiv:1711.02875 [pdf, ps, other]
Anomalous accelerations in spacecraft flybys of the Earth
L. Acedo
Comments: 41 pages, 11 figures (Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Science)
Subjects: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)

The flyby anomaly is a persistent riddle in astrodynamics. Orbital analysis in several flybys of the Earth since the Galileo spacecraft flyby of the Earth in 1990 have shown that the asymptotic post-encounter velocity exhibits a difference with the initial velocity that cannot be attributed to conventional effects. To elucidate its origin, we have developed an orbital program for analyzing the trajectory of the spacecraft in the vicinity of the perigee, including both the Sun and the Moon's tidal perturbations and the geopotential zonal, tesseral and sectorial harmonics provided by the EGM96 model. The magnitude and direction of the anomalous acceleration acting upon the spacecraft can be estimated from the orbital determination program by comparing with the trajectories fitted to telemetry data as provided by the mission teams. This acceleration amounts to a fraction of a mm/s2 and decays very fast with altitude. The possibility of some new physics of gravity in the altitude range for spacecraft flybys is discussed.
 
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wolram said:
The suggestion is a fifth force to counter these anomalies is this generally excepted?

I think the possibility of this being the result of a fifth fundamental force is extremely remote.
 
  • #3
Drakkith said:
I think the possibility of this being the result of a fifth fundamental force is extremely remote.
Yep. You can only introduce an idea like that when absolutely all other mundane cause have been eliminated - and I don't think they have been.
 
  • #4
This is reminiscent of the Pioneer Anomaly. There were similar tiny deviations of the path of the Pioneer spacecraft from what was predicted. Dozens (maybe hundreds?) of papers were written speculating that it was due to modifications of gravity, MOND, and whatever else you might want to invent. In the end, careful thermal modeling of the spacecraft showed that the effect was due to radiation pressure from the asymmetric radiation of the heat from the Radioisotope Thermal Generator. I'm with Drakkith and sophiecentaur. I strongly doubt that there is any new physics here.
 
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  • #5
IMHO, They have considered all possible scenarios , May be some one can come up with another one?
 
  • #6
Everyone thought all possible explanations had been considered for the Pioneer anomaly until someone came up with the right one. I'll give you a couple of possibilities:

(1) The model of the Earth's gravitational field that they are using was developed at a point in time. There is no reason to expect the Earth's mass distribution to be static. Water movements, ice movements, magma movements inside the Earth all would cause changes over time.

(2) How about impacts from small particles of orbital debris in low Earth orbit? We know it's a mess up there.

(3) Do they really know the atmospheric drag that well? They admit that atmospheric drag can account for about half of the Galileo anomaly. Maybe the atmospheric drag is really twice what they think. I know there are cases of satellites in low Earth orbit coming down sooner than expected because the orbit decayed more rapidly than expected.
 
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1. What are anomalous accelerations in spacecraft flybys of the Earth?

Anomalous accelerations refer to the unexpected changes in the velocity or trajectory of a spacecraft during a flyby of the Earth. These accelerations cannot be explained by known forces such as gravity or atmospheric drag.

2. What causes these anomalous accelerations?

The cause of anomalous accelerations in spacecraft flybys of the Earth is still not fully understood. Some theories suggest that it could be caused by interactions with Earth's magnetic field or imbalances in the spacecraft's electrical charge.

3. Have all spacecraft experienced anomalous accelerations during Earth flybys?

No, not all spacecraft have experienced anomalous accelerations during Earth flybys. However, there have been several documented cases, including the Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft and the Galileo spacecraft.

4. How do scientists study and measure anomalous accelerations?

Scientists use data collected from spacecraft flybys and compare it to predicted trajectories based on known forces. They also conduct experiments on Earth to simulate the conditions of a spacecraft flyby and study the potential causes of anomalous accelerations.

5. Why is it important to study anomalous accelerations in spacecraft flybys of the Earth?

Studying anomalous accelerations can help us better understand the fundamental laws of physics and potentially uncover new forces or phenomena that we are not yet aware of. It can also help improve our spacecraft designs and mission planning for future explorations of the universe.

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