Fundamental Physics with the Laser Astrometric Test Of Relativity


Abstract in English

The Laser Astrometric Test Of Relativity (LATOR) is a joint European-U.S. Michelson-Morley-type experiment designed to test the pure tensor metric nature of gravitation - a fundamental postulate of Einsteins theory of general relativity. By using a combination of independent time-series of highly accurate gravitational deflection of light in the immediate proximity to the Sun, along with measurements of the Shapiro time delay on interplanetary scales (to a precision respectively better than 0.1 picoradians and 1 cm), LATOR will significantly improve our knowledge of relativistic gravity. The primary mission objective is to i) measure the key post-Newtonian Eddington parameter gamma with accuracy of a part in 10^9. (1-gamma) is a direct measure for presence of a new interaction in gravitational theory, and, in its search, LATOR goes a factor 30,000 beyond the present best result, Cassinis 2003 test. The mission will also provide: ii) first measurement of gravitys non-linear effects on light to ~0.01% accuracy; including both the Eddington beta parameter and also the spatial metrics 2nd order potential contribution (never measured before); iii) direct measurement of the solar quadrupole moment J2 (currently unavailable) to accuracy of a part in 200 of its expected size; iv) direct measurement of the frame-dragging effect on light by the Suns gravitomagnetic field, to 1% accuracy. LATORs primary measurement pushes to unprecedented accuracy the search for cosmologically relevant scalar-tensor theories of gravity by looking for a remnant scalar field in todays solar system. We discuss the mission design of this proposed experiment.

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