scholarly journals Families of Periodic Planetary-Type Orbits in the N-Body Problem and Their Application to the Solar System

1978 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 263-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Hadjidemetriou ◽  
M. Michalodimitrakis

AbstractA new approach to the study of the Solar System and planetary systems in general is proposed, through the use of periodic planetary-type orbits of the general N-body problem. In such an orbit, one body (called Sun) has a large mass and the rest N-l bodies (called planets) have small but not negligible masses and it can be proved that monoparametric families of periodic orbits of the N-body problem exist in a rotating frame of reference, all being of the planetary type.Two cases are studied in detail, N=3 and N=4. In N=3, apart from a general discussion, we present a detailed analysis of the Sun-Jupiter-Saturn system and a study is made on which configurations with the masses of these two planets, or a multiple of them, are stable or unstable. Also, part of a family is shown to represent the Jupiter family of comets. It was found that commensurabilities are not in general associated with instabilities. For N=4 we present three families of periodic orbits. The motion corresponding to a branch of one of the above families has many similarities with the actual motion of the three inner satellites of Jupiter.It is shown that there exist many commensurable cases in the obtained periodic orbits and that the resonant orbits increase as the number of bodies increases. Based on these results, an attempt is made to explain the existence of commensurabilities in the Solar System.Finally, it is mentioned that a periodic motion of the planetary type can be used as a reference orbit for accurate computations for the actual motions of the planets or satellites of the Solar System. In this way the small divisor difficulties existing in the classical approach will not appear.

1979 ◽  
Vol 81 ◽  
pp. 23-28
Author(s):  
John D. Hadjidemetriou

It is known that families of periodic orbits in the general N-body problem (N≥3) exist, in a rotating frame of reference (Hadjidemetriou 1975, 1977). A special case of the above families of periodic orbits are the periodic orbits of the planetary type. In this latter case only one body, which we shall call sun, is the more massive one and the rest N-1 bodies, which we shall call planets, have small but not negligible masses. The aim of this paper is to study the properties of the families of periodic planetary-type orbits, with particular attention to stability. To make the presentation clearer, we shall start first with the case N=3 and we shall extend the results to N>3. We shall discuss planar orbits only.


2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (08) ◽  
pp. 2195-2209 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOHN D. HADJIDEMETRIOU ◽  
GEORGE VOYATZIS

We study the evolution of a conservative dynamical system with three degrees of freedom, where small nonconservative terms are added. The conservative part is a Hamiltonian system, describing the motion of a planetary system consisting of a star, with a large mass, and of two planets, with small but not negligible masses, that interact gravitationally. This is a special case of the three body problem, which is nonintegrable. We show that the evolution of the system follows the topology of the conservative part. This topology is critically determined by the families of periodic orbits and their stability. The evolution of the complete system follows the families of the conservative part and is finally trapped in the resonant orbits of the Hamiltonian system, in different types of attractors: chaotic attractors, limit cycles or fixed points.


2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (26) ◽  
pp. 1730022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuele Battista ◽  
Giampiero Esposito ◽  
Simone Dell’Agnello

Towards the end of nineteenth century, Celestial Mechanics provided the most powerful tools to test Newtonian gravity in the solar system and also led to the discovery of chaos in modern science. Nowadays, in light of general relativity, Celestial Mechanics leads to a new perspective on the motion of satellites and planets. The reader is here introduced to the modern formulation of the problem of motion, following what the leaders in the field have been teaching since the nineties, in particular, the use of a global chart for the overall dynamics of N bodies and N local charts describing the internal dynamics of each body. The next logical step studies in detail how to split the N-body problem into two sub-problems concerning the internal and external dynamics, how to achieve the effacement properties that would allow a decoupling of the two sub-problems, how to define external-potential-effacing coordinates and how to generalize the Newtonian multipole and tidal moments. The review paper ends with an assessment of the nonlocal equations of motion obtained within such a framework, a description of the modifications induced by general relativity on the theoretical analysis of the Newtonian three-body problem, and a mention of the potentialities of the analysis of solar-system metric data carried out with the Planetary Ephemeris Program.


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