Juno is a NASA space mission to Jupiter, arriving at the planet in July 2016. Through accurate Doppler tracking in X and Ka-band, the Radio Science experiment will allow to map Jupiter's gravity field, crucial for the study of the interior structure of the planet. In this paper we describe the results of numerical simulations of this experiment, performed with the ORBIT14 orbit determination software, developed by the Department of Mathematics of the University of Pisa and by the spin-off Space Dynamics Services srl. Our analysis included the determination of Jupiter's gravity field, the Love numbers, the direction of the rotation axis and the angular momentum magnitude, the latter by measuring the Lense-Thirring effect on the spacecraft. As far as the gravity field is concerned, the spherical harmonics coefficients of Jupiter's gravitational potential are highly correlated and the accuracy in the determination of the zonal coefficients of degree ℓ is degraded for ℓ>15ℓ>15. We explore the possibility of using a local model, introducing ring-shaped mascons, so as to determine the gravity field of the portion of the spherical surface bounded by latitudes 6°N and 35°N, the latitude belt observed during Juno's pericenter passes. Finally, the determination of Jupiter's angular momentum magnitude turned out to be compromised by the impossibility of separating the effects of the Lense-Thirring acceleration and of a change in Jupiter's rotation axis direction.
Gravimetry, rotation and angular momentum of Jupiter from the Juno Radio Science experiment
SERRA, DANIELE;TOMMEI, GIACOMO;MILANI COMPARETTI, ANDREA
2016-01-01
Abstract
Juno is a NASA space mission to Jupiter, arriving at the planet in July 2016. Through accurate Doppler tracking in X and Ka-band, the Radio Science experiment will allow to map Jupiter's gravity field, crucial for the study of the interior structure of the planet. In this paper we describe the results of numerical simulations of this experiment, performed with the ORBIT14 orbit determination software, developed by the Department of Mathematics of the University of Pisa and by the spin-off Space Dynamics Services srl. Our analysis included the determination of Jupiter's gravity field, the Love numbers, the direction of the rotation axis and the angular momentum magnitude, the latter by measuring the Lense-Thirring effect on the spacecraft. As far as the gravity field is concerned, the spherical harmonics coefficients of Jupiter's gravitational potential are highly correlated and the accuracy in the determination of the zonal coefficients of degree ℓ is degraded for ℓ>15ℓ>15. We explore the possibility of using a local model, introducing ring-shaped mascons, so as to determine the gravity field of the portion of the spherical surface bounded by latitudes 6°N and 35°N, the latitude belt observed during Juno's pericenter passes. Finally, the determination of Jupiter's angular momentum magnitude turned out to be compromised by the impossibility of separating the effects of the Lense-Thirring acceleration and of a change in Jupiter's rotation axis direction.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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