The period of free libration of Mercury's longitude about the position it would have had if it were rotating uniformly at 1.5 times its orbital mean motion is close to resonance with Jupiter's orbital period. The Jupiter perturbations of Mercury's orbit thereby lead to amplitudes of libration at the
Analytical model of the long-period forced longitude librations of Mercury
โ Scribed by Marie Yseboodt; Jean-Luc Margot; Stanton J. Peale
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 852 KB
- Volume
- 207
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0019-1035
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โฆ Synopsis
a b s t r a c t
The shaking of Mercury's orbit by the planets forces librations in longitude in addition to those at harmonics of the orbital period that have been used to detect Mercury's molten core. We extend the analytical formulation of . Icarus 199, 1-8) in order to provide a convenient means of determining the amplitudes and phases of the forced librations without resorting to numerical calculations. We derive an explicit relation between the amplitude of each forced libration and the moment of inertia parameter รฐB ร Aร=C m . Far from resonance with the free libration period, the libration amplitudes are directly proportional to รฐB ร Aร=C m . Librations with periods close to the free libration period of $12 years may have measurable ($arcsec) amplitudes. If the free libration period is sufficiently close to Jupiter's orbital period of 11.86 years, the amplitude of the forced libration at Jupiter's period could exceed the 35 arcsec amplitude of the 88-day forced libration. We also show that the planetary perturbations of the mean anomaly and the longitude of pericenter of Mercury's orbit completely determine the libration amplitudes.
While these signatures do not affect spin rate at a detectable level (as currently measured by Earthbased radar), they have a much larger impact on rotational phase (affecting imaging, altimetry, and gravity sensors). Therefore, it may be important to consider planetary perturbations when interpreting future spacecraft observations of the librations.
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