Jacobi integral

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In celestial mechanics, Jacobi's integral (also The Jacobi Integral or The Jacobi Constant; named after Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi) is the only known conserved quantity for the circular restricted three-body problem.[1] Unlike in the two-body problem, the energy and momentum of the system are not conserved separately and a general analytical solution is not possible. The integral has been used to derive numerous solutions in special cases.

Definition

Synodic system

One of the suitable coordinate systems used is the so-called synodic or co-rotating system, placed at the barycentre, with the line connecting the two masses μ1, μ2 chosen as x-axis and the length unit equal to their distance. As the system co-rotates with the two masses, they remain stationary and positioned at (−μ2, 0) and (+μ1, 0)1.

In the (xy)-coordinate system, the Jacobi constant is expressed as follows:

C_J=n^2 (x^2+y^2) + 2 \left(\frac{\mu_1}{r_1}+\frac{\mu_2}{r_2}\right) - \left(\dot x^2+\dot y^2+\dot z^2\right)

where:

Note that the Jacobi integral is minus twice the total energy per unit mass in the rotating frame of reference: the first term relates to centrifugal potential energy, the second represents gravitational potential and the third is the kinetic energy. In this system of reference, the forces that act on the particle are the two gravitational attractions, the centrifugal force and the Coriolis force. Since the first three can be derived from potentials and the last one is perpendicular to the trajectory, they are all conservative, so the energy measured in this system of reference (and hence, the Jacobi integral) is a constant of motion. For a direct computational proof, see below.

Sidereal system

In the inertial, sidereal co-ordinate system (ξηζ), the masses are orbiting the barycentre. In these co-ordinates the Jacobi constant is expressed by:

C_J=2 \left(\frac{\mu_1}{r_1}+\frac{\mu_2}{r_2}\right) + 2n\left(\xi \dot \eta- \eta \dot \xi\right) - \left(\dot \xi ^2+\dot \eta ^2+\dot \zeta^2\right).

Derivation

In the co-rotating system, the accelerations can be expressed as derivatives of a single scalar function

U(x,y,z)=\frac{n^2}{2}(x^2+y^2)+\frac{\mu_1}{r_1}+\frac{\mu_2}{r_2}

Using Lagrangian representation of the equations of motion:

\ddot x - 2n\dot y = \frac{\delta U}{\delta x}

 

 

 

 

(1)

\ddot y + 2n\dot x = \frac{\delta U}{\delta y}

 

 

 

 

(2)

\ddot z = \frac{\delta U}{\delta z}

 

 

 

 

(3)

Multiplying Eqs. (1), (2), and (3) by \dot x, \dot y and \dot z respectively and adding all three yields

\dot x \ddot x+\dot y \ddot y +\dot z \ddot z = \frac{\delta U}{\delta x}\dot x + \frac{\delta U}{\delta y}\dot y + \frac{\delta U}{\delta z}\dot z = \frac{dU}{dt}

Integrating yields

\dot x^2+\dot y^2+\dot z^2=2U-C_J

where CJ is the constant of integration.

The left side represents the square of the velocity v of the test particle in the co-rotating system.

1This co-ordinate system is non-inertial, which explains the appearance of terms related to centrifugal and Coriolis accelerations.

See also

Notes

  1. Bibliothèque nationale de France. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Bibliography

  • Carl D. Murray and Stanley F. Dermot Solar System Dynamics [Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1999], pages 68–71. (ISBN 0-521-57597-4)