Abstract
For a satellite in a nominally circular orbit at arbitrary inclination whose mean motion is commensurable with the Earth's rotation, the dependence of gravity on longitude leads to a resonant variation in eccentricity as well as the long-period oscillation in longitude. Provided forces capable of processing perigee are present, it is shown that the change in eccentricity for a satellite captured in librational resonance is not secular but periodic. There are corresponding resonance effects for a satellite in a nominally equatorial but eccentric orbit. Here the commensurability condition is that the longitudes of the apses shall be nearly repetitive relative to the rotating Earth. There will be a long-period oscillation in longitude which can take the form of either a libration (trapped) or a circulation (free), and there will also be an oscillation of the orbital plane having the same period as the precession of perigee relative to inertial space. © 1967.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Allan, R. R. (1967). Satellite resonance with longitude-dependent gravity-II. Effects involving the eccentricity. Planetary and Space Science, 15(12), 1829–1845. https://doi.org/10.1016/0032-0633(67)90020-7
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