1. Introduction
To the first post-Newtonian (1pN) level of order
, where
c is the speed of light in vacuum, the geodesic motion of a test particle through the deformed spacetime outside an axially symmetric oblate body of mass
M, equatorial radius
R and dimensionless mass quadrupole moment
is characterized by certain secular orbital precessions [
1,
2,
3,
4]. They have recently gained attention, being possibly detectable in some proposed space-based experiments like, e.g., HERO [
5].
Here, we will look at the long-term 1pN rate of change, proportional to
, of the spin
of a pointlike gyroscope freely moving with velocity
around an oblate primary. The analogous 1pN gyro’s precessional effects due to only the mass monopole (the mass
M) and the spin dipole (the proper angular momentum
) moments of the central body acting as source of the gravitational field are the time-honored de Sitter-Fokker (or geodetic) [
6,
7] and Pugh-Schiff [
8,
9] precessions, respectively. They were recently measured by the spaceborne mission Gravity Probe B (GP-B) in the field of Earth to ≃0.3% and ≃19%, respectively, [
10,
11], despite a higher accuracy had been originally expected [
12,
13]. GP-B’s data were used also to put constraints on some modified models of gravity; see, e.g., [
14]. We will not restrict ourselves to any particular orbital configuration of the moving gyroscope, and the symmetry axis of the oblate primary will retain an arbitrary orientation in space. We will calculate the sought effect both numerically and analytically by finding, among other things, that it depends on the initial position of the gyro along its orbit. In the case of GP-B, it turns out that the rate of change of the spin’s declination (DEC)
, averaged over an orbital revolution, may be as large as ≃30–40
. Thus, it may be potentially measurable in a future data reanalysis since the reported average experimental accuracy in measuring the temporal evolution of
is [
10,
11]
. For previous analytical calculations, relying upon various simplifying assumptions concerning the gyro’s orbit and different computational approaches, see Adler & Silbergleit [
15], Barker & O’Connell [
16], Breakwell [
17], O’Connell [
18]. Even putting aside the issue of the particular orbital configurations adopted, they are, at least, incomplete since they neglect an important feature in the averaging procedure yielding to the dependence on the gyro’s initial conditions which, instead, we will take into account. Our simultaneous numerical integrations of the equations of motion of the gyro and of its spin will display it, by supporting our analytical findings. Moreover, it seems that the aforementioned works return incorrect results even for the part which is independent of the initial conditions, being also in mutual disagreement. In the following, we will not deal too much with the spin’s right ascension (RA)
since it turns out that, for GP-B, its total rate of change of the order of
is negligible.
For the sake of completeness, we will analytically derive also the generalization of the Pugh-Schiff gravitomagnetic spin precession valid for an arbitrary orientation of the primary’s angular momentum and for a generic orbital configuration of the gyroscope.
The generality of our approach allows our results to be extended also to other astronomical and astrophysical scenarios of interest like, e.g., other planets of our solar system, exoplanets, binaries with compact stellar corpses, supermassive black holes orbited by planets and stars. To this aim, it may be interesting to recall that Haas & Ross [
19] investigated the possibility of using spacecraft-based missions to measure the angular momenta of Jupiter an the Sun by means of the gravitomagnetic Pugh-Schiff spin precession.
The outline of the paper is as follows. In
Section 2, we numerically calculate the total spin precession of the order of
by simultaneously integrating the equations for the parallel transport of the gyro’s spin 4-vector and the geodesic equations of motion of the gyroscope. The spin and orbital configurations of GP-B are used.
Section 3 is devoted to the analytical calculation. It, first, includes the direct effects (
Section 3.1), which are the de Sitter precession for an arbitrary orbital configuration (
Section 3.1.1), and the component of the spin rate of change of the order of
arising from using a fixed Keplerian ellipse for the orbital average (
Section 3.1.2). Then, in
Section 3.2, we calculate the indirect, or mixed, components of the sought precession. They are those arising from averaging the instantaneous 1pN de Sitter-like spin rate over the orbital period of a
-driven precessing ellipse (
Section 3.2.1), and those coming from the inclusion of the instantaneous orbital shifts caused by
in the averaging procedure (
Section 3.2.2). The total analytical spin precession of the order of
is discussed in
Section 3.3, where the GP-B case is illustrated and compared with the numerical results of
Section 2. The general expression of the gravitomagnetic spin precession is analytically calculated in
Section 4.
Section 5 summarizes our finding and offers our conclusions.
2. Numerical Simulations: Simultaneously Integrating the Equations for the Motion of the Gyroscope and of Its Spin
The equations for the parallel transport of the spin 4-vector
S of a pointlike gyroscope freely moving in the deformed spacetime of a central body are [
20,
21,
22,
23]
where
is the gyro’s proper time,
are the spacetime’s Christoffel symbols,
are the components of the spacetime metric tensor and of its inverse, respectively, and
are the components of the gyro’s 4-velocity
u. The space-like components of
S are the components of the gyro’s spin vector
, i.e.,
. The time-like component
of
S is determined by the constraint
1The geodesic equations of motion of the pointlike gyroscope are
In standard pN isotropic coordinates, the components of the metric tensor of the spacetime of an isolated body are [
3,
24]
where
is the Kronecker delta. In the following, we will use cartesian coordinates, so that
. In Equations (
5)–(7), the potential
of the oblate mass is
In Equation (
9),
is the gravitational parameter of the central body,
G is the Newtonian constant of gravitation,
is the Legendre polynomial of degree 2, while
is the cosine of the angle between the body’s symmetry axis
and the unit position vector
. In the case of a diagonal metric, as for Equations (
5)–(7), Equation (
3) yields
We set up a numerical code to simultaneously integrate both Equation (
1) and Equation (
4) for an arbitrary orientation of
in space and unrestricted orbital configurations for the moving gyroscope. The space-like components of
S are parameterized in terms of two spherical angles
as
which, in the case of Earth and an equatorial coordinate system, are the spin’s right ascension and declination, respectively. As initial conditions for both the gyroscope orbit and its spin, we adopt those of GP-B [
25], summarized in
Table 1. As far as the initial value of
is concerned, it can be retrieved from the condition of Equation (
3). The initial values of the space-like components of the 4-velocity
u can be obtained from
where
are the components of the velocity
(see Equation (46)), and
We, first, test our routine by successfully reproducing the de Sitter precession, shown in
Figure 1.
The time series in it were obtained by switching off
in both Equations (
1) and (
4). They correspond to the orbital average over a Keplerian ellipse
2 of the 1pN components of the right-hand-sides of Equation (
1) for
and
. As expected, all the signatures in
Figure 1 are independent of
.
Figure 2 displays the “direct” part of the spin precession of the order of
obtained by restoring
in Equation (
1), but not in Equation (
4), and subtracting from the resulting signatures the purely de Sitter ones.
It essentially corresponds to the orbital average of the 1pN components of the right-hand-sides of Equation (
1) for
and
over an actually non-existent Keplerian ellipse
3. Clearly, it is an unphysical situation which is just an intermediate check of our analytical calculation, to be displayed in
Section 3.1.2, and of the results existing in the literature. Its slope amounts to
, and is independent of
. As we will see in
Section 3.1.2, our analytical outcome for the direct precession of the order of
agrees with
Figure 2 to within
. Instead, the part of Equation (
53) of Barker & O’Connell [
16] containing
allows to obtain
, while the
-dependent part of
in ([
15], p. 153) corresponds to
. As it will be demonstrated in
Section 3.1.2, both of them disagree with our analytical calculation.
The total spin precessions of the order of
, obtained by simultaneously integrating both Equation (
1) and Equation (
4) with
for different values of
and subtracting the purely de Sitter trends from the resulting signatures, are displayed in
Figure 3.
They can be thought as the sum of the direct precession of
Figure 2 and of the “indirect”, or ”mixed”, ones arising from the fact that, in this case, the trajectory of the gyroscope is, more realistically, a (slowly) precessing ellipse mainly driven by
4 . It can be thought as if, in addition to the Keplerian average of the
-dependent parts of the space-like components of Equation (
1), the de Sitter-like 1pN components of the right-hand-sides of Equation (
1) for
and
were averaged over one orbital revolution by taking now into account also the
-induced instantaneous changes of the osculating Keplerian orbital elements parameterizing the varying ellipse, and the fact that the orbital period is the time interval between two successive passages at a changing perigee. The same, in principle, would hold also for the 1pN orbital changes which, however, would affect the spin precession to the
level. Effects of the order of
would arise by repeating the same average for the 1pN components of the right-hand-sides of Equation (
1) for
and
. Our numerical integration accounts simultaneously for all such negligible effects of higher order as well. A striking feature of
Figure 3 is that the indirect effects induce a neat dependence on
which can yield spin precessions as large as ≃30–40
. It is a quite important finding since the reported mean error in measuring the spin’s declination precession of GP-B is
[
10,
11], and it may prompt some reanalysis of the mission data. Such a dependence on
induced by the mixed effects is captured and reproduced by our analytical calculation of the overall precession in
Section 3.1.2,
Section 3.2.1 and
Section 3.2.2 to within ≲5–8
; cfr. with
Figure 4 in
Section 3.3. Instead, it is missing in the literature. Indeed, if, on the one hand, Adler & Silbergleit [
15] seemingly dealt only with the direct
-induced precession, on the other hand, Barker & O’Connell [
16] were aware of such an issue, but they somehow treated it only partly since their Equation (
52) does not contain any dependence on the initial orbital phase. Should it ever be related to the aforementioned issue of the orbital period in a precessing orbit, it is in disagreement with our analytical results for it, as we will show in
Section 3.2.1.
In all the previous integrations, the Earth’s spin axis was kept fixed and aligned with the reference
z axis. In principle, one should, at least, account also for precession and nutation displacing it over the years. In a further series of runs over 1 yr, we modeled them as per Montenbruck & Gill [
27] by accounting, among other things, for the largest nutation harmonic term due to the motion of the lunar node. The resulting pictures did not display any noticeable change with respect to the previous ones. Thus, we conclude that the slow change of the orientation of the Earth’s spin axis does not produce detectable 1pN
-driven effects during the time span considered.
3. Analytical Calculation
By expanding
calculated with Equation (
9) in Equations (
5)–(7), to the order of
, one obtains the instantaneous rates of change of the gyro’s spin components as
where the coefficients of the matrices
are, in general, time-dependent. They are
and
As far as the rates of change of the spin’s spherical angles
are concerned, from Equations (
13)–(15) one gets
Since we are interested in the long-term rate of change of
, we must properly average the right-hand-sides of Equations (
19)–(21) over one orbital period
. It requires care, especially for the effects of the order of
. Indeed, the actual orbital path of the gyroscope around its distorted primary is a generally slowly precessing ellipse [
26], not a fixed Keplerian one as it would be if it were
5. This implies that, during an orbital revolution, all the Keplerian orbital elements characterizing the shape, the size and the orientation of the ellipse undergo instantaneous variations due to
which should be taken into account in the averaging procedure since they give rise to effects which are just of the order of
6. Moreover, the fact that the line of the apsides, from which the time-dependent true anomaly
7f is reckoned, does vary during the orbital motion because of
has to be taken into account as well, yielding further contributions of the order of
. Such “indirect”, or ”mixed”, features are to be added to the direct ones arising from a straightforward average of Equations (
31)–(39) over an unperturbed Keplerian ellipse assumed as reference trajectory.
From a computational point of view, we can split the calculation of the averaged 1pN gyro’s spin precession in two parts.
3.1. The Direct Effects
The first one deals with what one may define as the “direct” effects, denoted in the following with the superscript
, arising from averaging Equations (
22)–(39), evaluated onto an unchanging
8 Keplerian ellipse. The latter is characterized by [
1]
In Equations (45) and (46), it is
with
In Equations (
42)–(50),
are the semilatus rectum, the semimajor axis, the eccentricity, the inclination, the longitude of the ascending node, and the argument of pericentre, respectively, of the Keplerian ellipse. The size and the shape of the latter are fixed by
a and
e, respectively. The inclination and the position of the orbital plane with respect to the reference
plane are determined by
I and
, respectively; the line of the nodes is the intersection of the orbital plane with the reference
plane. The orientation of the ellipse within the orbital plane itself is characterized by
. The unit vector
is directed along the line of the nodes toward the ascending node, while
lies in the orbital plane perpendicularly to
. The unit vector
is directed along the line of the apsides toward the pericentre in the orbital plane where
stays transversely to
itself. Finally, we mention also the unit vector
directed along the orbital angular momentum perpendicularly to the orbital plane
9.
The resulting direct effects consist of the usual de Sitter precession, and of one part of the 1pN spin’s rate of change due to
. In
Section 3.1.1 and
Section 3.1.2, we will display the explicit expressions of the averaged matrix elements of Equations (
22)–(39). For the sake of simplicity, we will omit the brackets
denoting the average over one orbital period throughout the paper.
3.1.1. The de Sitter Precession
Let us introduce the following dimensional amplitude having the dimension of reciprocal time
where
is the primary’s Schwarzschild radius. The analytical expressions of the average of Equations (
22)–(30) yield the geodetic precession for an arbitrary orbital configuration of the moving gyroscope. We have
From Equations (
40) and (41) and Equations (
53)–(61), it is possible to obtain
Figure 1 agrees with Equation (
62) calculated for GP-B. Equations (
53)–(61) show that the 1pN spin rate due to the mass monopole of the primary can be written as
with
The vectorial expression of Equation (
64) agrees with, e.g., (10.146a) of Poisson & Will [
24] in the limit
.
3.1.2. The Spin Rate of Change: Direct Part
Let us introduce the following dimensional amplitude having the dimension of reciprocal time:
In the following, we will display the averaged expressions of Equations (
31)–(39). For the sake of simplicity, we will limit here to the case in which the reference
z axis is aligned with the unit vector
of the body’s symmetry axis. We have
It can be noted that Equations (
67)–(75) are independent of
, in agreement with
Figure 2. In the case of GP-B, Equations (73)–(75) and Equation (
40) yield
; cfr. with
Figure 2. For an exactly circular (
) and polar (
) orbit, by posing
one has, from Equations (73)–(75) and Equation (
40),
It agrees neither with Equation (
53) of Barker & O’Connell [
16], which allows to obtain
nor with
of Adler & Silbergleit [
15] (pag. 153), from which one gets
3.2. The Indirect Effects
This part treats what one may call the “indirect”, or “mixed”, effects arising from the precession of the orbit of the gyro caused by the oblateness of the primary. When applied to Equations (
22)–(30), they give rise to further components of the gyro’s spin rate of change of the order of
which are to be added to the direct ones of
Section 3.1.2 in order to have the total expression of the 1pN spin rate due to
. In turn, the calculation of the mixed effects can be split into two parts.
The first one, tagged in the following with the superscript “mix I”, consists of averaging Equations (
22)–(30), to be evaluated onto the unperturbed Keplerian ellipse, by means of [
1,
24]
It accounts for the instantaneous change of the line of the apsides; indeed, the orbital period
is just the time required by the test particle to return at the (moving) pericentre position along its path. In Equation (
80),
are the radial and transverse components, respectively, of the perturbing acceleration
inducing the slow variation of the otherwise fixed Keplerian ellipse. In the present case, it is
The second part, labeled in the following with the superscript
, takes into account the
-driven instantaneous changes experienced by the osculating Keplerian elements during an orbital revolution. The mean variation of any of the spin components’ rates
over an orbital period occurring due to the aforementioned shifts can be worked out as
where
is the true anomaly at a referenced epoch
, and
. The instantaneous shifts of the Keplerian orbital elements
are to be calculated in the usual perturbative way by integrating the right-hand-sides of the corresponding Gauss equations (e.g., [
24,
28,
29]) from
to a generic
f. In the present case, the shifts of Equation (85) are due to the acceleration of Equation (83). The curly brackets
in Equations (84)–(85) denote that their content has to be evaluated onto the unperturbed Keplerian ellipse. In particular,
are to be calculated by evaluating Equations (
22)–(30) onto the Keplerian ellipse, while Equation (44) has to be used for the (Keplerian) expression of
entering Equation (84).
3.2.1. The Impact of the Motion of the Line of the Apsides on the Orbital Period: The -Type Indirect Effects
Here, we display the analytical expressions of the average of Equations (
22)–(30) performed by means of Equation (80). To avoid extremely cumbersome formulas, we show only those valid in an equatorial coordinate system. They turn out to be
It can be noted that Equations (86)–(94) are independent of
. For an exactly circular and polar orbit, Equations (92)–(94) and Equation (
40) yield
While, seemingly, Adler & Silbergleit [
15] did not deal with the issue of the indirect effects at all, Barker & O’Connell [
16] did partly so. Their Equation (
52) allows to infer
which disagrees with Equation (95). However, since it is unclear how Barker & O’Connell [
16] actually calculated their indirect precession, it is uncertain that Equation (96) can meaningfully be compared with Equation (95).
3.2.2. The Impact of the Instantaneous Shifts of the Orbital Elements during an Orbital Revolution: The -Type Indirect Effects
Here, we display the analytical expressions of the average of Equations (
22)–(30) calculated according to Equations (84)–(85). Because of their exceptional cumbersomeness, we can only show their limit for
in an equatorial coordinate system.
The dependence of Equations (97)–(105) on is apparent.
3.3. The Total (Direct + Mixed) Spin Precessions of the Order of
The results of
Section 3.1.2,
Section 3.2.1 and
Section 3.2.2 allow to obtain the total 1pN spin precession due to the oblateness of the primary. It is not possible to display them here in full due to their cumbersomeness. As an example, for an exactly circular and polar orbit, we have
If
, as for GP-B, Equations (106) and (107) reduce to.
From Equations (108) and (109) it can be noted that, since the pericentre of a polar orbit, in general, does undergo a secular precession due to
[
26], the shift of the spin’s right ascension is, actually, a harmonic signal with half the period
10 of the pericentre, while the spin’s declination experiences a genuine secular trend superimposed to a harmonic pattern with
.
In the case of GP-B, we plot its spin’s declination precession as a function of
in
Figure 4.
It can be noted that the predicted rate is larger than
for
, with peaks of more than
. A comparison with
Figure 3 shows agreement between our analytical and numerical results up to a few
.
We do not display the total GP-B’s 1pN right ascension rate due to
since it turned out to be smaller than
, while the reported experimental accuracy in measuring
is as large as
[
10,
11].
5. Summary and Conclusions
The quadrupole mass moment of a body affects, among other things, also the general relativistic precession of the spin of an orbiting gyroscope. We worked out it, to the 1pN level, both numerically and analytically by taking into account also the effect that the -driven change of the gyro’s orbit has on the the long-term spin rate itself. Indeed, limiting to averaging out the instantaneous -dependent part of the spin precession onto a Keplerian orbit is not sufficient to correctly reproduce the total spin rate of change to the order of . Also the instantaneous Newtonian orbital shifts due to have to be taken into account when the average of the 1pN de Sitter-like instantaneous part of the spin precession is performed. The latter contribution introduces a dependence of the total averaged spin rate of the order of on the initial orbital phase . Such a feature was confirmed, among other things, also by the simultaneous numerical integrations of the equations for the parallel transport of the spin and of the geodesic equations of the gyro’s motion that we performed by varying .
We applied our results to the past GP-B mission in the field of Earth by finding a net precession of the declination of the spin axis which may be as large as ≃30–40. Since the reported error in measuring the GP-B’s declination rate amounts to , our result may prompt a reanalysis of the data in order to see if the effect we predicted could be detected.
For the sake of completeness, we analytically worked out, to the 1pN level, also the general expression of the gravitomagnetic spin precession induced by the proper angular momentum of the central body.
Both our numerical and analytical methods hold for an arbitrary orientation of the body’s symmetry axis and for a general orbital configuration of the gyro. As such, they can be extended also to other astronomical and astrophysical scenarios of interest like, e.g., other planets of our solar system, exoplanets close to their parent stars, stars orbiting galactic supermassive black holes, tight binaries hosting compact stellar corpses. It is hardly necessary to mention that, years ago, spacecraft-based missions were proposed to measure the angular momenta of Jupiter and the Sun by means of the gravitomagnetic Pugh-Schiff spin precessions.