| Themes > Science > Astronomy > The Universe > The Development of Modern Astronomy > Sir Isaac Newton and the Unification of Physics & Astronomy > Gravitational Perturbations and the Prediction of New Planets |
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The Two-Body ApproximationHowever, from the form of the gravitational force
Gravitational PerturbationsHowever, the small deviations from this ideal picture have consequences if careful measurements are made. These small deviations from the simplified picture are called perturbations. They can be calculated systematically using Newton's laws of motion and gravitation from the positions of the known masses in the Solar System.If we account carefully for all known gravitational perturbations on the motion of observed planets and the motion of the planet still deviates from the prediction, there are two options:
The Discovery of the New Planet Neptune In 1846, the planet Neptune was discovered after its existence was
predicted because of discrepancies between calculations and data for the
planet Uranus. Astronomers found the new planet almost exactly at the position
predicted by the calculations of Leverrier (Adams had also calculated the
position independently). We illustrate the situation schematically in the
adjacent diagram. The dominant interaction between Uranus and the Sun is
indicated with the heavy line, but some perturbations associated with other
masses are indicated by thin lines. By using Newton's laws to calculate
the perturbations on the orbit of Uranus by an hypothesized new planet,
Leverrier and Adams were able to predict where the planet had to be in order
to cause the observed deviations in the position of Uranus. Once astronomers
took this calculation seriously, they found the new planet within hours
of turning their telescopes on the region of the sky implicated by the calculations.
This precise prediction of the new planet and its location was striking confirmation of the power of Newton's theory of gravitation. (Although in truth it must be said that both Leverrier and Adams made an incorrect assumption in their calculations concerning the radius of the new planet's orbit. Fortunately, the error largely cancelled out of the calculations and had little effect on their final results.) The Accidental Discovery of PlutoLater, similar calculations on supposed perturbations of the orbits of Uranus and Neptune suggested the presence of yet another planet beyond the orbit of Neptune. Eventually, in 1930, a new planet Pluto was discovered, but we now know that the calculations in this case were also in error because of an incorrect assumption about the mass of the new planet. It is now believed that the supposed deviations in the orbits of Neptune and Uranus were errors in measurement because the actual properties of Pluto would not have accounted for the supposed perturbations. Thus, the discovery of Pluto was a kind of accident.Effects Beyond Newtonian PerturbationsThe power of Newton's theory became apparent as detailed calculations accounted more and more precisely for the orbits of the planets. Any deviations from the expected behavior soon became viewed as evidence for unseen masses in the Solar System. However, later observations of anomalies in the orbit of Mercury could not be accounted for by the gravitational perturbation of a new planet (the hypothetical new planet, which turned out not to exist, was called Vulcan). As we discuss in the next section, early in this century this forced the replacement of Newton's Law of Gravitation with Einstein's Theory of General Relativity. |
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