Standard gravitational parameter
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Body | μ (km3s-2) |
---|---|
Sun | 132,712,440,018 |
Mercury | 22,032 |
Venus | 324,859 |
Earth | 398,600 |
Mars | 42,828 |
Ceres | 63 |
Jupiter | 126,686,534 |
Saturn | 37,931,187 |
Uranus | 5,793,947 |
Neptune | 6,836,529 |
Pluto | 1,001 |
In astrodynamics, the standard gravitational parameter of a celestial body is the product of the gravitational constant G and the mass M:
The units of the standard gravitational parameter are km3s-2
[edit] Small body orbiting a central body
Under standard assumptions in astrodynamics we have:
where:
- is the mass of the orbiting body,
- is the mass of the central body,
and the relevant standard gravitational parameter is that of the larger body.
For all circular orbits around a given central body:
where:
- is the orbit radius,
- is the orbital speed,
- is the angular speed,
- is the orbital period.
The last equality has a very simple generalization to elliptic orbits:
where:
- is the semi-major axis.
For all parabolic trajectories is constant and equal to ;.
For elliptic and hyperbolic orbits is twice the semi-major axis times the absolute value of the specific orbital energy.
[edit] Two bodies orbiting each other
In the more general case where the bodies need not be a large one and a small one, we define:
- the vector is the position of one body relative to the other
- , , and in the case of an elliptic orbit, the semi-major axis , are defined accordingly (hence is the distance)
- (the sum of the two values)
where:
- and are the masses of the two bodies.
Then:
- for circular orbits
- for elliptic orbits: (with a expressed in AU and T in years, and with M the total mass relative to that of the Sun, we get a3 / T2 = M)
- for parabolic trajectories is constant and equal to
- for elliptic and hyperbolic orbits is twice the semi-major axis times the absolute value of the specific orbital energy, where the latter is defined as the total energy of the system divided by the reduced mass.
[edit] Terminology and accuracy
The value for the Earth is called geocentric gravitational constant and equal to 398 600.441 8 ± 0.000 8 km3s-2. Thus the uncertainty is 1 to 500 000 000, much smaller than the uncertainties in G and M separately (1 to 7000 each).
The value for the Sun is called heliocentric gravitational constant and equals 1.32712440018×1020 m3s-2.