Exploring the Weak Limit of Gravity at Solar System Scales

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1 Exploring the Weak Limit of Gravity at Solar System Scales A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at George Mason University By Gary L. Page Master of Business Administration Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1982 Master of Science Clarkson University, 1971 Bachelor of Science Clarkson University, 1969 Director: Dr. John F. Wallin, Associate Professor Department of Computational and Data Sciences Spring Semester 2009 George Mason University Fairfax, VA

2 Copyright c 2009 by Gary L. Page All Rights Reserved ii

3 Dedication First and foremost, I dedicate this dissertation to my bride, Vicky, who encouraged me to begin this journey and then steadfastly continued to provide support and assistance throughout the whole process. Thanks are due also to our children, Kelly and Amanda Wolcott, whose support and interest made the work much easier. Finally, my mother, Rose, and my late father, Louis, provided an environment throughout my youth that encouraged curiosity and learning, and thus contributed directly towards my desire and ability to accomplish the effort described here. Without all these people, the work would not have been possible and I dedicate the results to them. iii

4 Acknowledgments Dr. John Wallin could not have provided more help and guidance than he so ably and willingly bestowed as my Dissertation Director. As a knowledgeable, flexible, and patient mentor and friend, I could not have asked for more, even though he had an annoying habit of being correct when we disagreed on technical matters. I also acknowledge the help, support, and assistance of the rest of my committee, Drs. Peter Becker, Kirk Borne, and Daniel Carr, who all provided assistance in various ways at various times and their valuable contributions are gratefully recognized. Additionally, thanks are due David Dixon, colleague, collaborator, friend, discoverer of asteroids, proprietor of Jornada Observatory (IAU 715), and expert in practical astrometry for providing both illuminating conversations and periodic exhortations. Finally, I want to thank Dr. Barbara L. O Kane, my associate, colleague, and friend from my other life, who provided support and assistance in many ways and at many times as the work proceeded. iv

5 Table of Contents Page List of Tables viii List of Figures Abstract Introduction and Background Scientific Justification Problem Statement Objectives Background Observational Background Pioneer Effect Caused by Known Physics Pioneer Effect Caused by Unknown Physics Are These Explanations Plausible? Are These Effects Observable? The Broader Context Organization of Dissertation Astrometric Methods and Models Astrometry Celestial Mechanics Sources of Perturbations Solar System Dynamics Geometrical Aspects Asteroids as Gravity Probes Methods and Models Minor Planets Asteroid Sample Selection Results Discussion Asteroid Dynamics Observational Issues v ix xii

6 3.4 Conclusions Major Planets as Gravity Probes Methods and Models Characterizing the Pioneer effect Estimating Pioneer effect manifestations Celestial mechanics Simulation of observations Results Prediction of sky position from orbital elements Errors in orbital elements derived from observations How can we assess the quality of an orbital fit? Discussion Conclusions Comets as Gravity Probes Methods and Models Non-Gravitational Forces Comet Sample Selection Results Discussion Conclusions Impact of LSST and Pan-STARRS Methods and Models Results Angular Separation Probability of a Significant Position Difference Quality of Orbital Fits Discussion Heuristic for Detection Times Physical Basis for Heuristic What Would An Observer See? Conclusions Astrometry Summary Discussion Conclusions Dark Matter Methods and Models Galactic Dark Matter Distribution Local Dark Matter Density vi

7 9 Dark Matter Capture Via a Weak Interaction Methods and Models Solar Interior Model Solar Potential Hard Sphere Scattering Scattering Cross Section Scattering Depth Results Discussion Conclusions Dark Matter Capture Via Three-Body Interactions Methods and Models The Circular Restricted Three Body Problem Hill s Problem Curves of Zero Velocity Results Discussion Conclusions Dark Matter Summary Discussion Conclusions Conclusions and Final Comments Conclusions Astrometry Dark Matter Capture Impact of Dissertation Future Research Areas Final Remarks Bibliography vii

8 List of Tables Table Page 1.1 Implications of the existence or nonexistence of the Pioneer effect and dark matter Orbital parameters of asteroids susceptible to the Pioneer effect Observational characteristics of asteroid candidates on 2005 April Elements for the hypothetical bodies used in the analysis Frequency of archive observations of Pluto Total number of synthetic observations used in analysis, for each arc segment evaluated Four cases combining gravity models and forces determining motion Orbital parameters of comets susceptible to the Pioneer Effect Change in comet orbital period because of Pioneer Effect and NGF Observational characteristics of comet candidates on 2005 April The mean (in years), standard deviation (in years), and rms residual (in arcsec) for each case described by a semimajor axis and an eccentricity Heuristic parameter values for time to a statistically significant angular separation viii

9 List of Figures Figure Page 2.1 Keplerian elements describe the shape, size, and orientation of orbits Angular deviation between Keplerian and perturbed orbits Maximum observable distance versus absolute visual magnitude Angular differences between positions of (5335) Damocles Orbital fit rms residuals for Damocles Angular position differences when orbits are extrapolated with known elements with and without a Pioneer effect perturbation Angular position difference when orbits are extrapolated with elements determined from synthetic observations generated with a Pioneer effect perturbation over a 50 year arc Angular position difference when orbits are extrapolated with elements determined from synthetic observations generated with a Pioneer effect perturbation over a 100 year arc Angular position difference when orbits are extrapolated with elements determined from synthetic observations generated with a Pioneer effect perturbation over a 150 year arc Angular position difference when orbits are extrapolated with elements determined from synthetic observations generated with a Pioneer effect perturbation over a 200 year arc Angular position difference when orbits are extrapolated with elements determined from synthetic observations generated with a Pioneer effect perturbation over a 250 year arc Angular position differences for Pluto when orbits are predicted with elements determined from synthetic observations generated with a Pioneer effect perturbation Observed minus calculated residuals for Pluto with respect to the DE414 ephemeris ix

10 4.9 Normal points for the DE414 residuals and the residuals for the synthetic observations relative to their ephemeris Total rms residual by epoch for the DE414 case and the synthetic observation case The condition number of the orbital fitting problem as a function of eccentricity for different observation arc lengths Relative error in orbital elements in the linear approximation as observation arc varies Rms residual of orbital fit as observation arc length varies Gravitational acceleration exerted by Uranus and Neptune on Pluto as a function of time Angular deviation between modified comet orbits Angular separation as a function of time from perihelion for an object with a semimajor axis of 20 AU Angular separation as a function of time from perihelion for an object with a semimajor axis of 40 AU Probability of a statistically significant angular difference as a function of time from perihelion for an object with a semimajor axis of 20 AU Probability of a statistically significant angular difference as a function of time from perihelion for an object with a semimajor axis of 40 AU Probability of a significant sky position difference between the perturbed and the unperturbed case for selected objects as a function of time from perihelion Rms residual for various combinations of observations and gravity model as the observation arc lengthens Time (in years) from perihelion that gives a 95 percent probability of a significant difference in sky position between a perturbed case and the unperturbed case Time for an object that sometimes comes within 20 AU of the Sun to reach a significant angular separation True anomaly at which an observable position difference between the perturbed and unperturbed cases is found at the 95 percent significance level True anomaly that results in observable positional differences at the 95 percent significance level Normal points in right ascension for an object with a semimajor axis of 25 AU and an eccentricity of 0.3 in a matching case x

11 6.12 Normal points in right ascension for an object with a semimajor axis of 25 AU and an eccentricity of 0.3 in a mismatched case Solar mass interior to a radial distance Solar temperature versus radial distance Total mass density versus radial distance Mass fraction of main Solar constituents versus radial distance Gravitational potential energy per unit mass inside the Sun Illustrative dark matter trajectories through the Sun Optical depth to scattering for two dark matter trajectories Number of dark matter particles suffering different fates as dark matter particle mass varies Log of binned frequency of captured dark matter particles as dark matter mass is varied Frequency of energy bins of captured dark matter particles Frequency of semimajor axis bins for captured dark matter Optical depth to scattering as a function of time for several representative orbits Representative set of orbital states that a dark matter particle traverses from initial capture into Solar orbit to eventual escape Zero velocity curves in the orbital plane of the primaries Zero velocity curves in the orbital plane of the primaries for different values of C J Zero velocity curves for the Hill problem in the orbital plane of the primaries for different values of C H Zero velocity curves for the Hill problem in different planes for different values of C H xi

12 Abstract EXPLORING THE WEAK LIMIT OF GRAVITY AT SOLAR SYSTEM SCALES Gary L. Page, PhD George Mason University, 2009 Dissertation Director: Dr. John F. Wallin Precision tracking of multiple spacecraft in the outer Solar System has shown an unmodelled perturbation, consisting of a small, constant, radial acceleration directed towards the Sun. Since its detection, a great deal of work has been devoted to explaining this Pioneer effect, both in terms of spacecraft-generated systematics and external physical causes. Its continuing importance is found in the fact that it has been impossible to explain away the effect through conventional means. This leaves open the possibility, however unlikely, that new physics is represented in the effect. This new physics, in turn, would be connected intimately to gravity with huge implications across astrophysics and beyond. With this as motivation, this dissertation investigates two areas related to the Pioneer effect. The first goal is to investigate the use of planets, comets, and asteroids to determine the reality of the Pioneer effect through precision astrometry. Here, we showed that asteroids can be used to evaluate the gravitational field in the outer Solar System. The observations can be conducted with modest allocations of telescope time, and would provide a definitive answer to the question within the next 20 years.

13 In assessing current knowledge of Pluto s orbit, we determined that it is not known well enough at present to preclude the existence of the Pioneer effect. We also showed that comets are not ideal candidates for measuring gravity in the outer Solar System, although some present intriguing observational targets for related reasons. Finally, we showed that Pan-STARRS and LSST are likely to lead to a capability to test gravity in the outer Solar System in the near future. The second goal of the dissertation involved exploring two general mechanisms for explaining the Pioneer effect. The first approach involved investigating the effective mass density that would be produced in the Solar System as a result of the capture of elementary particle dark matter by means of a hypothetical weak interaction between the dark matter particles and the matter of the Sun. The second approach involved three body capture of dark matter from the Galactic halo into Solar orbit. The three bodies interacting are the Galactic barycenter, the Sun, and the dark matter particle. In this phase of the dissertation, we showed that capture of Galactic dark matter into Solar orbit by a weak interaction with Solar matter does not accumulate dark matter in the region where the Pioneer effect manifests itself. It is possible that it does accumulate at smaller distances, however. Similarly, we showed that three body gravitational capture is not feasible as a cause of the Pioneer effect either. Dark matter captured by this mechanism would occur generally at distances far greater than that needed to cause the Pioneer anomaly. Thus, neither mechanism for capture of dark matter into Solar orbit sufficed to explain the Pioneer effect. Finally, we discuss a number of future research areas that became apparent during the course of the research.

14 Chapter 1: Introduction and Background This dissertation describes a research program that investigates the use of astrometry of outer Solar System bodies as a probe of gravity at multiple AU scales. The effort is part of a broader research program that includes investigation of Solar System capture scenarios of Galactic dark matter that could have observable dynamical effects. This line of research is important because gravity is the primary force molding the evolution of the entire cosmos. Introducing ad hoc concepts like dark matter to make theories fit observation follows a time-honored approach of assuming the basic correctness of our picture of Nature and adding the simplest concepts necessary to make our picture whole. Many times in the past, the reality of the new concepts was eventually demonstrated. However, given the lack of success in directly detecting dark matter and having no empirical basis for even speculating on its nature, the time has come to investigate other possibilities. 1.1 Scientific Justification While at first glance the goal of investigating the weak limit of gravity at Solar System scales might seem to be a settled problem, the reality is quite different. At laboratory scales, Newton s Law of Universal Gravitation is experimentally verified by such means as the Cavendish experiment and its variants and descendants. At the distance scale of the inner planets, the tracking of space probes has experimentally confirmed our modern understanding of gravity to a high degree of accuracy. This is especially true for Venus, Mars, the Moon, and, of course, our own planet, whose positions in space have been essentially surveyed in by multiple spacecraft. At the largest scale, that of galaxy clusters, we observe gravitational lensing of distant galaxies by foreground clusters. However, we do not see enough matter to provide the 1

15 requisite mass to cause the lens. Similarly, on somewhat smaller but still large scales, the rotation curves of individual galaxies cannot be understood in terms of rotation in a gravitational field produced by the visible matter. In facing these issues, investigators had two choices. Either they could assume that there was some invisible matter influencing the motion, or that our theories of gravity were wrong. Normally, the easy way out is to assume that dark matter exists, even though we have no real idea of its nature and have not yet succeeded in directly detecting it. At intermediate scales, say that of binary stars, we have problems observationally verifying our understanding of gravity. Such objects have only been known for about 200 years and long period binaries are not even known to be gravitationally bound to one another. Even shorter period binaries have not been studied extensively enough to observe deviations from normal gravity. Note that, as our interest is in weak-field systems, in this discussion we are ignoring binary pulsars and close, relativistic binaries, where gravity is well-measured by, for example, pulsar timings. At somewhat smaller spatial scales, we have the outer planets of our Solar System along with various minor planets, comets, etc. The question addressed in this dissertation and our research program is whether gravity can be tested at the 20 to 100 AU distance scales typical of our local environment. Even at these scales, there is some evidence of problems with gravity. Our most precisely tracked spacecraft, Pioneers 10 and 11, have shown a constant sunward radial acceleration (termed the Pioneer effect) over a range of heliocentric distances from 20 to 75 AU that has resisted conventional explanation. Thus, wherever we look at either very weak gravity fields or, perhaps the same thing, at large distances, we see problems with our understanding of gravity. This and related issues are among the outstanding problems facing astronomy and astrophysics as we enter the twentyfirst century. 2

16 1.2 Problem Statement As I will discuss below, a great deal of work has been devoted to explaining the Pioneer effect, both in terms of spacecraft-generated systematics and external physical causes. The importance of this is found in the fact that it has been impossible to explain away the effect through conventional means. This leaves open the possibility, however unlikely, that new physics is represented in the effect. This new physics, in turn, would be intimately connected to gravity with huge implications across astrophysics and beyond. Continuing professional interest in this area of research has been shown by the European Space Agency, as part of its Cosmic Vision planning (Bignami et al., 2005), exploring as a major theme What are the fundamental physical laws of the Universe, that envisions high precision experiments in space aimed at uncovering new physics, including probing the limits of general relativity, symmetry violations, etc. Further, the International Space Science Institute has convened an international team, The Pioneer Explorer Collaboration: Investigation of the Pioneer Anomaly at ISSI, 1 to define a process by which the entire Pioneer data record can be analyzed and to use the results to define an instrument package capable of providing an independent confirmation of the anomaly and to study the feasibility of a dedicated mission to explore the Pioneer effect (Dittus et al., 2006). Even continuing public interest in this area of research is shown by the fact that the most successful fundraising appeal conducted to date by the Planetary Society has been to support saving the complete record of all existing Pioneer tracking data, allowing continuing efforts to analyze the complete dataset. These efforts have borne fruit and an extended dataset has been successfully recovered. It is being analyzed in a number of ways by a number of groups, and recent reports of progress have appeared in the literature (List and Mullin, 2008; Toth and Turyshev, 2006, 2008; Turyshev and Toth, 2007; Turyshev et al., 2006, for example). In light of the continuing interest in this problem, one primary goal of the dissertation is to investigate the use of planets, comets, and asteroids to investigate the reality of the 1 3

17 Pioneer effect. The proposed method of attack is one that has neither been tried nor explored by interested parties. Although theorists have explored many potential causes of the Pioneer effect, Occam s razor dictates that we preferentially investigate simpler explanations as a first choice. To this end, the second phase of the dissertation involves exploring two general mechanisms for explaining the Pioneer effect within the currently accepted astrophysical context. The first approach involves investigating the effective mass density that would be produced in the Solar System as a result of the capture of elementary particle dark matter by means of a hypothetical weak interaction between the dark matter particles and the matter of the Sun. This approach is restricted to potential dark matter candidates such as neutrinos or more exotic particles like neutralinos or axions that are able to interact weakly with matter in the interior of the Sun. The second approach to explaining the Pioneer effect involves an effect that has not heretofore been recognized: three body capture of dark matter from the Galactic halo into Solar orbit. We are all familiar with utilizing gravity assist trajectories to minimize travel time for spacecraft on the way to the outer planets. What hasn t previously been explored is using this same dynamical phenomenon in reverse. In this case the three bodies whose interactions can cause halo dark matter to lose sufficient energy to become bound to the sun are the Sun itself, the dark matter particle, and the Galactic barycenter. The process has a very large capture cross section and has the additional benefit of applying to any dark matter candidate (either elementary particle or macroscopic bodies of various levels of exoticness). Summarizing, the problem areas addressed in the dissertation are twofold: Investigating the feasibility of using major and minor planets to investigate gravity at intermediate scales and in particular to evaluate the reality of the Pioneer effect. Investigating several potential causes of gravitational perturbations due to dark matter in the outer Solar System, and through them the Pioneer effect. 4

18 The importance of this effort lies in its relation to empirically investigating the weak limit of gravity at Solar System scales. This is an outstanding problem that, in turn, ties into perhaps one of the largest problems outstanding in astrophysics the nature and existence of dark matter. As far as the first problem area is concerned, it is a remarkable fact that once minor planets are discovered and their orbits determined, there is little follow-up on characterizing their orbits if they are found to present no earth impact threat. Minor planets are never followed with an eye towards assessing the gravitational fields through which they travel. Indeed, many asteroids are currently lost in that it has been so long since any reported observations were made that they could not now be observed by looking in a predicted position a new search would be required (Sansaturio et al., 1998). The orbits of the outer planets are well modeled, even though there remain irritating discrepancies in the residuals of Pluto. However, in the absence of extended visits by spacecraft, there remain uncertainties in the orbital elements of the outer planets that could easily obscure small perturbations like the Pioneer effect. Thus, there are few tests of gravity at intermediate distance scales and theorists considering gravity at these scales are operating in an empirical vacuum. There is even disagreement about the degree to which observations of the outer planets validate Newtonian gravity (Krotkov and Dicke, 1959). Indeed, recently Page et al. (2006) stated that observational uncertainties associated with the positions of the outer planets make them infeasible for demonstrating or refuting the existence of the Pioneer effect. This statement resulted in several citations that disputed that assertion (Iorio and Giudice, 2006; Tangen, 2007), or at least to assert that the statement is controversial (Sanders, 2006). The issues raised by these researchers are dealt with elsewhere in the dissertation. In any case, if a method of measuring the Pioneer effect was available it might serve, once and for all, to either support or refute its existence as a real phenomenon. Depending upon the characteristics of the measurements, it might even be possible to differentiate between alternative predictions of different explanations for the effect. 5

19 Thus, one main purpose of the dissertation is to outline the feasibility of using observations of planets, comets, and asteroids to evaluate the distribution of mass in the outer Solar System and thereby explore the Pioneer effect by precision astrometry. Secondly, its purpose is to evaluate some possible causes of the Pioneer effect and whether they are observationally detectable. Such a program could have profound effects on our understanding of the mass distribution in the outer Solar System. 1.3 Objectives Within the two broad purposes outlined above, the main objectives of the dissertation include the following: Using asteroids to measure the Pioneer effect This objective involves investigating whether asteroids can be used to determine whether or not the Pioneer effect can be validated by means of astrometric observations. The work shows that a sustained observation campaign or properly chosen asteroids can over time show whether or not the Pioneer effect exists. Using major planets as a probe of gravity in the outer Solar System Contrary to a number of statements in the literature, and in agreement with other assertions I have made, we show that the motion of the major outer planets do not indicate that the Pioneer effect does not exist; rather, uncertainties in the orbit of Pluto potentially conceal small perturbations to gravity. Using comets to measure the Pioneer effect This objective seeks to investigate the use of comets to see if they provide a vehicle for measuring the Pioneer effect. As smaller and typically fainter bodies that are also subject to nongravitational perturbations (Marsden et al., 1973), comets are not ideal candidates for this purpose; however, the general feasibility of comets in this role is the primary thrust of this objective. Exploring the impact of uncoming large, high observation cadence instruments such as Pan-STARRS and LSST on the use of objects in the outer Solar System to investigate 6

20 gravity Recognizing the scarcity of time on large telescopes, the dissertation shows that the advent of high speed, deep surveys will revolutionize the use of minor planets as probes of gravity in the outer Solar System. Evaluating mass capture due to particle interactions between dark matter and matter in the Sun as a source of the Pioneer effect If Galactic dark matter exists as elementary particles, and if it interacts both gravitationally and weakly with baryonic matter, those interactions should lead to capture of dark matter into Solar orbit. The thrust of this objective is to evaluate the possibility that dark matter captured in this way can explain the Pioneer effect. Evaluating three-body capture as a mechanism for explaining the Pioneer effect A mechanism for explaining the Pioneer effect in the context of a mass concentration in the outer Solar System that has not previously been investigated is through threebody capture of Galactic dark matter into Solar orbit. In this context the three bodies are the Galactic barycenter, the Sun, and the dark matter particle. Note that this mechanism does not demand that dark matter be of an elementary particle nature. Any type of dark matter that gravitates would be subject to this effect. The dissertation outlined above, in addition to standing on its own in terms of originality and scientific utility, is also open-ended in that it provides a natural path to future activities in an open, but important, area of research: Assessing gravity at the multiple AU scale. This area of research seems particularly fruitful and a number of potential future research areas are clearly visible. These future directions are outlined later in the dissertation. 1.4 Background As indicated above, our interests here are broader than whether or not the Pioneer effect really exists. Rather, we are attempting to assess the weak limit of gravity at intermediate scales like that of the Solar System. However, the Pioneer effect provides an empirical touchstone upon which we can base our investigation. 7 Below, we describe the Pioneer

21 effect in some detail, outlining potential explanations that have thus far failed to convince researchers that they in fact explain the observations, discuss whether or not the explanation attempts are plausible, and whether the Pioneer effect is independently verifiable. Finally, we describe a somewhat broader view of the arena within which the dissertation operates, and show that the researches described here have meaning, validity, and worth whether or not the Pioneer effect really exists Observational Background Beginning in 1972, humanity began exploring the outer Solar System with the launch of Pioneer 10. As this probe receded from Earth and continued performing its initial and extended missions, other robotic explorers followed in its wake. In 1973, Pioneer 11 was launched; the twin spacecraft Voyager 1 and 2 both departed in 1977; Galileo left on its roundabout trip in 1989; Ulysses was launched into a Solar polar orbit in 1990; Cassini went on its way in 1997, and after passing by Jupiter, has entered orbit around Saturn for its extended mission; and in 2006, New Horizons left to visit Pluto in During these missions, a number of groups followed the probe s trajectories with interest, attempting to discern unexplained perturbations of various types in the motion of the spacecraft. Anderson et al. (1989) placed bounds on the amount of dark matter in Solar orbit by using Voyager 2 Uranus flyby data to generate a new and more accurate ephemeris which bounded the extra mass. This work was followed by Anderson et al. (1995), which used Voyager 2 Neptune flyby data, coupled with data from the Jupiter encounters of Pioneer 10 and 11, as well as Voyager 1 to improve the dark matter bounds derived previously. The Pioneers were of particular interest in this regard. As primitive spacecraft, they were spin stabilized and required a minimum number or Earth reorientation maneuvers which permitted precise acceleration measurements. The Voyager probes, on the other hand, were three axis stabilized and conducted numerous attitude control maneuvers that overwhelmed the small signature of the anomalous acceleration. The Pioneer design is in keeping with one of the main objectives of their extended missions, which was to conduct 8

22 accurate celestial mechanics measurements. However, both Galileo and Ulysses were also investigated. The failure of Galileo s high gain antenna to deploy made integration times for data collection uncomfortably long, This, coupled with the closeness of the Sun and the size of the spacecraft, made it very difficult to collect the necessary ranging data to determine the position of the spacecraft and made it impossible to separate out Solar radiation effects from any anomalous acceleration. Thus, Galileo data could not be used to verify the existence of the anomaly. Ulysses, on the other hand, gives some indication of an anomalous acceleration, but the assumptions required and the high correlation between Solar radiation forces and any anomalous acceleration make it impossible to convincingly separate out the two effects. The Pioneer probes are the primary focus here, and both following Pioneer 10 s Jupiter encounter and Pioneer 11 s Saturn encounter, they continued outward on hyperbolic trajectories, leaving the Solar System. Because of their spin-stabilization and large heliocentric distances, they provided ideal platforms for their extended mission of conducting dynamical studies of the outer Solar System. As reported by Anderson et al. (1998), beginning in 1980 when Pioneer 10 was 20 AU from the Sun and the pressure due to Solar radiation had decreased to less than cm sec 2, analysis of unmodeled accelerations found that the biggest systematic error in the acceleration residuals was a constant acceleration, directed towards the Sun, of approximate magnitude cm sec 2, well in excess of the five day average acceleration accuracy of 10 8 cm sec 2. When Pioneer 11 passed this 20 AU threshold, a similar effect was seen. Prompted by this unusual result, Galileo and Ulysses data were investigated for a similar effect. Although the limited data available from Galileo could not be used, Ulysses showed a similar unmodeled acceleration residual, even at its much smaller heliocentric distance. The effect on the Pioneers has persisted until at least a heliocentric distance of 75 AU Pioneer Effect Caused by Known Physics As might be expected, the well-reasoned arguments for an anomalous acceleration in the outer Solar System precipitated a large body of work in an effort to explain the acceleration 9

23 in terms not requiring additional hypothetical mass concentrations with special properties. In a capstone paper, Anderson et al. (2002a) reviews and addresses a large number of objections to the conclusion that there is an anomalous acceleration and provides a detailed look at technical information on the Pioneers that was previously not readily available. Roughly speaking, potential causes of the Pioneer effect can be divided into those imposed upon the spacecraft from external sources, and those originating within the spacecraft. Among the former are: Solar radiation pressure, wind, and corona; the stability of clocks and the mechanical stability of the NASA Deep Space Network (DSN) antenna complex; and electromagnetic Lorentz forces acting on a charged spacecraft. The latter encompass reaction forces from the emitted radio beam, differential emissivities of the Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators (RTGs), helium expelled from the RTGs due to decay of their plutonium fuel, and gas leaks. Anderson et al. (2002a) also reviews a number of attempts to explain the Pioneer effect in terms of known physics. These include: mass concentrations due to resonance effect with Neptune and Pluto (Malhotra, 1995, 1996), forces due to a hypothetical disk of matter in the ecliptic plane (Boss and Peale, 1976), and the implications for the Pioneer effect of these concentrations (Liu et al., 1996). Similarly, RTG heat reflecting off the spacecraft was investigated (Anderson et al., 1999a; Katz, 1999) and non-isotropic radiative cooling of the spacecraft was suggested (Anderson et al., 1999b; Murphy, 1999). Variations on this theme were also suggested by Scheffer (2001a,b, 2003) and discussed in Anderson et al. (2001). The idea that the Pioneer effect was due to some new manifestation of known physics was also explored. Anderson et al. (2002a), for example, also investigated the feasibility of the anomalous acceleration being due to some unknown interaction of radio signals with the Solar wind. Similarly, Crawford (1999) investigated the idea of a gravitational red shift causing the Pioneer effect. Others looked at resistance to the motion of the spacecraft due to interplanetary dust, but infrared observations ruled out dust as a cause (Backman et al., 1995; Teplitz et al., 1999). Investigation of these areas continues. In particular, Nieto (2005) analytically assessed 10

24 the possiblity that Kuiper Belt mass distributions could lead to the Pioneer effect. Similary, Xu and Siegel (2008) and Peter and Tremaine (2008) investigated the mass distribution in the Solar System of dark matter particles being captured by means of three body interactions between the Sun, planets, and the dark matter particles. Additionally, the ongoing analysis of the extended Pioneer dataset has led to further investigation of thermal issues with the spacecraft (Bertolami et al., 2008; Toth and Turyshev, 2009) and the possiblity that thermal radiation is the cause of the Pioneer effect. None of these mechanisms convincingly explains the Pioneer effect. Although even the discoverers of the Pioneer effect acknowledge that spacecraft systematics are the most likely explanation for the acceleration, there have been no convincing arguments that that is the case. The alternative, that the Pioneer effect represents a real phenomenon, is very appealing for many reasons. What is lacking is a means of measuring the effect, its variation, its potential anisotropies, and its region of influence. The bottom line is that the Pioneer effect seems well-founded and has not been convincingly explained in terms of known physics or engineering parameters of the spacecraft involved. Although spacecraft systematics remain the most likely explanation for the Pioneer effect, its potential existence is of great interest for a variety of fundamental physical reasons Pioneer Effect Caused by Unknown Physics Anderson et al. (2002a) also reviews a large number of potential explanations for the anomalous acceleration in terms of new physics. These include: whether the effect is due to dark matter or a modification of gravity; whether it is a measure of space-time curvature and cosmological expansion (e.g., Solar System coordinates are not inertial coordinates); whether it is due to a number of more radical variants on the relativistic gravity theme. However, in the end, Anderson et al. (2002a) finds no mechanism or theory that explains the anomalous acceleration. Thus, in the minds of the authors of that paper, the possibility of new physics could not be ruled out. Interest in the phenomenon continues. 11

25 For example, Anderson et al. (2002b) reports a potential consequence of a Pioneer effect on the structure of the Oort cloud, and others attempt to explain the anomalous acceleration as a manifestation of the cosmological constant (Nottale, 2003). Some simple ideas that might seem to have potential for explaining the Pioneer effect were explored in a different context. For example, Talmadge et al. (1988) investigated the impact of a number of different gravitational alternatives (e.g., a different force law exponent, a Yukawa-type distance dependence, and MOND 2 ) and found that the motion of the inner planets is known so precisely from space-based measurements, that none of these alternatives are feasible as modifications to gravity. Some additional ideas investigated include modifying gravity with a Yukawa-type correction term (Capozziello et al., 2001), long range accelerations induced by a new scalar field (Mbelek and Lachièze-Rey, 1999), and conformal gravity with dynamic mass generation (Wood and Moreau, 2001). A hypothetical superstrong interaction between photons or massive bodies and individual gravitons as a cause of a nondoppler cosmological red shift was investigated (Ivanov, 2002), as were other possible manifestations of the graviton background (Ivanov, 2001). Cosmological models in 4+1 dimensions with a changing time scale factor were evaluated in the context of the Pioneer effect (Belayev, 1999), as were the time variation of the Newtonian gravitational constant (Mansouri et al., 1999). More recently, deformation of planetary orbits by a time dependent gravitational potential in the universe (Trenčevski, 2005) and more exotic models have also been evaluated, including five dimensional brane worlds, which might manifest corrections to Newtonian gravity (Bronnikov et al., 2006). Exotic proposal continue. Østvang (2002) investigated explaining the Pioneer effect with quasi-metric relativity, Belayev and Tsipenyuk (2004) looked at gravi-electromagnetism in five dimensions, Rañada (2004) sought an explanation in the acceleration of clocks, and McCulloch (2007) modelled the Pioneer effect as modified inertia. Other ideas that were 2 MOdified Newtonian Dynamics, a Newtonian gravity alternative which can be viewed as positing a minimum acceleration. 12

26 investigated include a variable cosmological constant and a test particle moving in a cloud of dust (Massa, 2008), and the endless possiblities inherent in a rotating Gödel universe (Wilson, 2008). The point made by this somewhat lengthy, but very incomplete, summary of research into potential new physics explanations for the Pioneer effect is that it has generated no shortage of ideas, many devoid of any connection with empiricism, to explain this intriguing phenomenon Are These Explanations Plausible? As observed above, even the discoverers of the Pioneer effect believe that spacecraft systematics are its most likely cause. The problem is that investigators have been unable to agree that reasonable values of the systematics are large enough to provide the observed effect. The prosaic explanations are all reasonable and plausible; they just don t seem to add up to enough thrust to cause the Pioneer effect. There are a multitude of such systematic effects and not all are well understood. Indeed, even if the Pioneer effect is shown convincingly to not exist as an independent effect and is merely due to systematics, the probable outcome of such a finding is that it would be recognized that greater care is needed in characterizing spacecraft destined for high precision missions. This endeavor would be worthwhile to engineers and others on its own merits. With respect to the new physics causes, we must note that new physics presents itself to us very infrequently and must be dealt with using the strongest possible skepticism. However, one must acknowledge that the payoff associated with new physics is extraordinarily large and so we ignore exotic possibilities at our collective peril. Our entire academic preparation is necessarily devoted to performing standard science rather than the new science that is only very occasionally called for (Kuhn, 1996). Perhaps this is why we all remember the pioneers of new areas even though those areas undergo great growth in application and sophistication as time progresses, sometimes making the research areas virtually unintelligible to their originators. 13

27 This dissertation provides two thrusts of fundamental importance. First, recognizing that astrophysics is empirically based, we seek to develop an observational technique to explore the Pioneer effect. Certainly this approach is less expensive and easier than designing, building, launching, and monitoring special purpose or piggyback space probes intended to explore the Pioneer effect. At the very least these two approaches complement one another. Secondly, this disertation will evaluate two less exotic possible explanations of the Pioneer effect that have not heretofore been investigated. Both of these approaches involve the capture of dark matter into Solar orbit. In the first case, the underlying assumption is that the dark matter consists of nonbaryonic elementary particles that interact with baryonic matter through gravity (or else it would not suffice to be dark matter) and a hypothetical weak interaction. The other approach involves three body capture into Solar orbit which would operate against any matter, dark or otherwise, orbiting the Galaxy. Thus, this capture process is more general and, since it involves only gravity, would operate against any possible dark matter candidate ranging from elementary particles to brown dwarfs and mini-black holes (Titarchuk and Chardonnet, 2006) Are These Effects Observable? As outlined elsewhere in the dissertation, the problem of the Pioneer effect and determining if it is real or not can be attacked in a number of ways. The theorists have been going wild offering many alternatives to general relativistic gravity and even non-newtonian offshoots like MOND. Additionally, possible explanations relating to cosmological expansion, time variations, inertial effects, and even more exotic possibilities have been discussed at length in the literature. Unfortunately, in all these cases, what is missing is empirical evidence beyond the few Pioneer effect observations. Another class of approaches involve spacecraft. The European Space Agency is considering both special purpose and piggyback spacecraft intended to explore the Pioneer effect. The recently launched New Horizons probe to Pluto and beyond has a lengthy spinstabilized cruise phase after its gravity assist maneuver near Jupiter and, after leaving the 14

28 Jovian magnetospheric tail, tracking data will start being recorded for analysis some time in the future when funding is available 3 (see also Nieto, 2008). The distinguishing characteristic of these approaches is that the very expensive and time consuming process of going from mission formulation and planning to spacecraft construction and finally launch and mission conduct. Indeed, the only probe (New Horizons) currently en route and able to contribute to the understanding of the Pioneer effect does not have funds to support the requisite analysis, although there is hope that they will be available in the future. In this dissertation another approach is offered. First, we will investigate the use of bodies in the outer Solar System to attempt to measure the Pioneer effect. Although this approach is likely to require a long-term observation campaign, it is inexpensive and complements potential space-based approaches. Secondly, we will investigate two alternative causes of the Pioneer effect that have not elsewhere been evaluated. Both of these alternatives involve the capture of Galactic dark matter into Solar orbit and investigating the potential for these processes to explain the Pioneer effect in terms of current physics. These approaches are new in the context of the Pioneer effect and one approach, three-body capture, has the attractive feature that it operates on any type of dark matter that gravitates. Of course, if dark matter doesn t gravitate, it doesn t satisfy the minimum requirements for its invocation explaining the rotation curves of galaxies and gravitational lensing by clusters of galaxies The Broader Context At first glance it might seem that the dissertation is heavily weighted towards, and highly dependent upon, the existence of the Pioneer effect. We use the Pioneer effect as a not currently understood empirical observation that is an exemplar of the type of gravitational perturbation that could result from a lack of understanding of gravity at intermediate distance scales. Because of this, the twin problem areas attacked in the disseration operate upon a considerably broader stage. Table 1.1 attempts to capture this broader arena. 3 Dr. Michael Summers comment in George Mason University Space Science Colloquium, 1 Feb

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