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Cosmic influences upon the basic reference system for GAIA Michael Soffel & Sergei Klioner TU Dresden.

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Presentation on theme: "Cosmic influences upon the basic reference system for GAIA Michael Soffel & Sergei Klioner TU Dresden."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cosmic influences upon the basic reference system for GAIA Michael Soffel & Sergei Klioner TU Dresden

2 Definition of BCRS (t, x) with t = x 0 = TCB, spatial coordinates x and metric tensor g   post-Newtonian metric in harmonic coordinates determined by potentials w, w i IAU-2000 Resolution B1.3

3 BCRS-metric is asymptotically flat; ignores cosmological effects, fine for the solar-system dynamics and local geometrical optics

4 The cosmological principle (CP): on very large scales the universe is homogeneous and isotropic The Robertson-Walker metric follows from the CP

5 Consequences of the RW-metric for astrometry: - cosmic redshift - various distances that differ from each other: parallax distance luminosity distance angular diameter distance proper motion distance

6 Is the CP valid? Clearly for the dark (vacuum) energy For ordinary matter: likely on very large scales

7 Anisotropies in the CMBR WMAP-data

8  /  < 10 for R > 1000 (Mpc/h) -4 (O.Lahav, 2000)

9 The WMAP-data leads to the present (cosmological) standard model: Age(universe) = 13.7 billion years  Lum = 0.04  dark = 0.23   = 0.73 (dark vacuum energy) H 0 = (71 +/- 4) km/s/Mpc

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11 One might continue with a hierarchy of systems GCRS (geocentric celestial reference system) BCRS (barycentric) GaCRS (galactic) LoGrCRS (local group) etc. each systems contains tidal forces due to system below; dynamical time scales grow if we go down the list -> renormalization of constants (sec- aber) BUT: expansion of the universe has to be taken into account

12 BCRS for a non-isolated system Tidal forces from the next 100 stars: their quadrupole moment can be represented by two fictitious bodies: Body 1Body 2 Mass1.67 M sun 0.19 M Sun Distance1 pc  221.56°285.11°  -60.92°13.91°

13 In a first step we considered only the effect of the vacuum energy (the cosmological constant  ) !

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15 Various studies: - transformation of the RW-metric to ‚local coordinates‘ - construction of a local metric for a barycenter in motion w.r.t. the cosmic energy distribution - transformation of the Schwarzschild de Sitter metric to LOCAL isotropic coordinates - cosmic effects: orders of magnitude

16 Transformation of the RW-metric to ‚local coordinates ‘

17 ‘ Construction of a local metric for a barycenter in motion w.r.t. the cosmic energy distribution

18 (local Schwarzschild-de Sitter)

19 Cosmic effects: orders of magnitude Quasi-Newtonian cosmic tidal acceleration at Pluto‘s orbit 2 x 10**(-23) m/s**2 away from Sun (Pioneer anomaly: 8.7 x 10**(-10) m/s**2 towards Sun) perturbations of planetary osculating elements: e.g., perihelion prec of Pluto‘s orbit: 10**(-5) microas/cen 4-acceleration of barycenter due to motion of solar-system in the g-field of  -Cen solar-system in the g-field of the Milky-Way Milky-Way in the g-field of the Virgo cluster < 10**(-19) m/s**2

20 Conclusions If one is interested in cosmology, position vectors or radial coordinates of remote objects (e.g., quasars) the present BCRS is not sufficient  the expansion of the universe has to be considered  modification of the BCRS and matching to the cosmic R-W metric becomes necessary

21 THE END


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