Frame Drag and Orbits
Most recent answer: 09/20/2015
- Patrick McMillan DDS (age 65)
Lewisville, NC,USA
A very interesting question!
Let's start with a little clearer Newtonian picture. Without some way of getting rid of energy, those objects are either in elliptical orbits or not, they won't get "captured". We don't want to assume there's dust or anything like that for ordinary friction to dissipate energy, because that would interact both with the spinning planet and the orbiters, making a huge difference between the two. So let's say they are both in elongated elliptical orbits. If that were the end of the story those orbits would never decay.
Now we'll use a little General Relativity to say that the gravitational radiation from those oscillating mass quadrupole moments would radiate some energy away, very gradually causing the orbiters to spiral in. Now we'll take into account frame-dragging from the spinning planet. It makes one of the orbiters see a very slightly higher effective field than the other when they're close to the planet, so it will swing around a little faster and radiate a little more. By now we're talking about very tiny effects but in principle one orbit will decay a little faster than the other.
Mike W.
(published on 09/20/2015)