Old perturbative methods for a new problem in Celestial Mechanics: the space debris dynamics

Perturbative methods have been developed and widely used in the XVIII and XIX century to study the behavior of N -body problems in Celestial Mechanics. Such methods apply to nearly-integrable Hamiltonian systems and they have the remarkable property to be constructive. A well-known application of pe...

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Published inBollettino della Unione matematica italiana (2008) Vol. 16; no. 2; pp. 411 - 428
Main Authors Celletti, Alessandra, Vartolomei, Tudor
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cham Springer International Publishing 01.06.2023
Springer Nature B.V
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ISSN1972-6724
2198-2759
DOI10.1007/s40574-023-00347-x

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Summary:Perturbative methods have been developed and widely used in the XVIII and XIX century to study the behavior of N -body problems in Celestial Mechanics. Such methods apply to nearly-integrable Hamiltonian systems and they have the remarkable property to be constructive. A well-known application of perturbative techniques is represented by the construction of the so-called proper elements , which are quasi-invariants of the dynamics, obtained by removing the perturbing function to higher orders. They have been used to identify families of asteroids; more recently, they have been used in the context of space debris, which is the main core of this work. We describe the dynamics of space debris, considering a model including the Earth’s gravitational attraction, the influence of Sun and Moon, and the Solar radiation pressure. We construct a Lie series normalization procedure and we compute the proper elements associated to the orbital elements. To provide a concrete example, we analyze three different break-up events with nearby initial orbital elements. We use the information coming from proper elements to successfully group the fragments; the clusterization is supported by statistical data analysis and by machine learning methods. These results show that perturbative methods still play an important role in the study of the dynamics of space objects.
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ISSN:1972-6724
2198-2759
DOI:10.1007/s40574-023-00347-x