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The Chaotic Motion of the Solar System

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

J. Laskar*
Affiliation:
Bureau Des Longitudes, 77 Ave. Denfert Rochereau, 75014 Paris, France

Abstract

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In a previous paper (Laskar, Nature, 338, 237-238), the chaotic nature of the solar system excluding Pluto was established by the numerical computation of the maximum Lyapunov exponent of its secular system over 200 Myr. In the present an explanation is given for the exponential divergence of the orbits: it is due to the transition from libration to circulation of the critical argument of the secular resonance 2(g4−g3)−(s4−s3) related to the motions of perihelions and nodes of the Birth and Mars. An other important secular resonance is identified: (g1−g5)−(s1−s2). Its critical argument stays in libration over 200 Myr with a period of about 10 Myr and amplitude from 85° to 135°. The main features of the solutions of the inner planets are now identified when taking these resonances into account. Estimates of the size of the chaotic regions are determined by a new numerical method using the evolution with time of the fundamental frequencies. The size of the chaotic regions in the inner solar system are large and correspond to variations of about 0.2 arcsec/year in the fundamental frequencies. The chaotic nature of the inner solar system can thus be considered as robust against small variations of the initial conditions or of the model. The chaotic regions related to the outer planets frequencies are very thin except for g6 which present variations sufficiently large to be significant over the age of the solar system.

Type
Part I Chaos
Copyright
Copyright © Nova Science Publishers 1993