Flyby anomaly
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The flyby anomaly is an unexpected energy increase during Earth flybys of satellites. This has been observed as an anomalous shift in the S-Band and X-Band Doppler data which translates to a significant velocity increase of a few mm/s at perigee. So far, no conventional mechanism could be found as being responsible for this effect.
[edit] Observations
Gravitational assists, i.e. the technique of changing a spacecraft's heliocentric orbital velocity by means of an exchange of potential and kinetic energy between a planet and a spacecraft, provide an indispensable tool for solar system exploration. Since the success of such a flyby manoeuver depends crucially on the geometry of the trajectory, the position and the velocity of a spacecraft is continuously tracked during its encounter with a planet by the Deep Space Network (DSN).
The flyby anomaly was first noticed shortly after the Earth flyby of the Galileo spacecraft on 8 December 1990 by a careful inspection of the DSN Doppler data. While it was expected that the Doppler residuals (observed minus computed data) should remain flat, the analysis revealed an unexpected 66 mHz shift which corresponds to a velocity increase of 3.92 mm/s at perigee. An investigation of this effect at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) and the University of Texas could not give a satisfying explanation. However, no anomaly was detected after the second Earth flyby of the Galileo spacecraft in December 1992 since any possible velocity increase was masked by atmospheric drag due to the lower altitude of 303 km.
On January 23, 1998 the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft experienced an anomalous velocity increase of 13.46 mm/s after its Earth encounter. Cassini-Huygens gained ~0.11 mm/s in August 1999 and Rosetta 1.82 mm/s after its Earth flyby in March 2005.
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[edit] References
- C. Lämmerzahl, O. Preuss, H. Dittus, Is the physics within the Solar system really understood?, Proceedings of the 359th WE-Heraeus Seminar on "Lasers, Clocks, and Drag-Free: Technologies for Future Exploration in Space and Tests of Gravity" , Preprint: [1], 2006
- J.D. Anderson, J.G. Williams, Long-range tests of the equivalence principle, Class. Quantum Grav., 18, 2447-2456, 2001
- P.G. Antreasian, J.R. Guinn, Investigations into the unexpected delta-v increase during the Earth Gravity Assist of GALILEO and NEAR, paper no. 98-4287 presented at the AIAA/AAS Astrodynamics Specialist Conf. and Exhibition, Boston, 1998
- J.D. Anderson, J.K. Campbell, M.M. Nieto, The Energy Transfer Process in Planetary Flybys, Preprint: [2], 2006