Abstract
AbstractThree main effects from general relativity (GR) may change the geometry and orientation of artificial earth satellite orbits, i.e., the Schwarzschild, Lense–Thirring, and De Sitter effects. So far, the verification of GR effects was mainly based on the observations of changes in the orientation of satellite orbital planes. We directly observe changes of the satellite orbit geometry caused by GR represented by the semimajor axis and eccentricity. We measure the variations of orbit size and shape of GPS, GLONASS, and Galileo satellites in circular and eccentric orbits and compare the results to the theoretical effects using three years of real GNSS data. We derive a solution that assumes the GR to be true, and a second solution, in which the post-Newtonian parameters are estimated, thus, allowing satellites to find their best spacetime curvature. For eccentric Galileo, GR changes the orbital shape and size in perigee in such a way that the orbit becomes smaller but more circular. In the apogee, the semimajor axis decreases but eccentricity increases, and thus, the orbit becomes more eccentric. Hence, the orbital size variabilities for eccentric orbits are greatly compensated by the orbital shape changes, and thus the total effect of satellite height change is much smaller than the effects for the size and shape of the orbit, individually. The mean semimajor axis offset based on all GPS, GLONASS, and Galileo satellites is − 17.41 ± 2.90 mm, which gives a relative error of 0.36% with respect to the theoretical value.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
7 articles.
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