User:NOrbeck/Time ephemerides

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Time ephemerides. Relativistic time dilation integral.


Introduction[edit]

Crucial for pulsar timing. Used to reduce observed Time of Arrival (ToA) to the solar system barycenter. For example, the Tempo2 software package.

The relativistic time dilation integral:[1]

where:

are the time arguments of the spatial ephemeris (Teph),
is the barycentric coordinate time (TCB),
is the terrestrial coordinate Time (TT),
is the barycentric position of the Earth,
is the barycentric velocity of the Earth,
is the Newtonian potential of all solar system bodies, excluding for the Earth, evaluated at the geocenter.
is the time ephemeris correction constant,
is the speed of light.


Relativistic scale factors[edit]

  • = 1.48082686741×10−8 ± 2×10−17 = the average value of 1 - d(TCG)/d(TCB)
  • = 1.55051976772×10−8, mean rate of TCB-TT.


TE405[edit]

TE405 is a numerical time ephemeris of the Earth based on the JPL DE405 ephemeris.[2]

TE405 approximates the relativistic time-dilation integral from the years 1600 to 2200 using numerical quadrature of the DE405 ephemeris. The integral is required to transform between Terrestrial Time (TT), and the (solar system) barycentric time scales ephemeris time (Teph) or TCB. Teph is a linear transformation of TCB that represents the independent variable of a modern numerical ephemeris. The time ephemeris results have an accuracy of order 0.1 ns. Available here as a discrete Chebyshev approximation that requires much less computer time to evaluate than a detailed time ephemeris series. Angular frequency and mass transformation corrections that should be applied to the time ephemeris series of Fairhead & Bretagnon[3]. These corrections make an extended form of this series with 1705 terms agree with our work to within 15 ns over the epoch range. A further correction of two long-term sinusoids that reduces this maximum residual to 5 ns. The long-term residuals fit by these sinusoids and the remaining short-term residuals appear to be the result of errors in the fit of VSOP82/ELP2000 (the analytical ephemeris upon which the Fairhead & Bretagnon series is based) to the earlier JPL ephemeris, DE200. Following Fukushima[4] we eliminate the linear term from TE405 by comparing with the corrected series results. The result for the linear coefficient of the subtracted term is

.

This does not include the periodic post-Newtonian and asteroid perturbation effects because they are negligible. However, when the average post-Newtonian and asteroid corrections of Lc(PN) = 109.7×10−18 and Lc(A) = 5×10−18 to Lc, the result is Lc = (1.48082686741±2)×10−17.

When this result is combined with a recent value for the potential at the geoid[5] corresponding to Lg = 6.969290112×10−10 ± 6×10−18 one obtains,

.

The factor K relates ephemeris units for time and distance to the corresponding SI units for the same quantities.

References[edit]

  1. ^ The IAU 2000 resolutions for astrometry, celestial mechanics and metrology in the relativistic framework: explanatory supplement, http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0303376
  2. ^ A. Irwin, T. Fukushima (1999). "A numerical time ephemeris of the Earth". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
  3. ^ Fairhead & Bretagnon (1990). "An analytical formula for the time transformation TB-TT". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
  4. ^ T. Fukushima (1995). "Time Ephemeris". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
  5. ^ Burša; et al. (1997). "The geopotential value W0 for specifying the relativistic atomic time scale and a global vertical reference system". Springer. {{cite news}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help)
Harada, W., Fukushima, T. (2003). "Harmonic Decomposition of Time Ephemeris TE405", Astronomical Journal, 126, 2557-256.

See Also[edit]

Time dilation
Ephemeris time
Barycentric Coordinate Time
Barycentric Dynamical Time
Geocentric Coordinate Time
Terrestrial Time

External Links[edit]


Category:Theory of relativity