Advancing Tests of Relativistic Gravity via Laser Ranging to Phobos
Slava G. Turyshev, William Farr, William M. Folkner, Andre R. Girerd,, Hamid Hemmati, Thomas W. Murphy, Jr., James G. Williams, and John J. Degnan

TL;DR
Phobos Laser Ranging aims to significantly improve tests of relativistic gravity by measuring space curvature around the Sun with high precision using laser links between Earth and Phobos, enhancing understanding of fundamental physics.
Contribution
This paper proposes a novel space mission concept utilizing laser ranging to Phobos to achieve unprecedented accuracy in testing relativistic gravity parameters.
Findings
Projected measurement of the Eddington parameter γ with two orders of magnitude improvement.
Potential to measure the change in gravitational constant G over time.
Capability to test the inverse square law at 1.5 AU with enhanced precision.
Abstract
Phobos Laser Ranging (PLR) is a concept for a space mission designed to advance tests of relativistic gravity in the solar system. PLR's primary objective is to measure the curvature of space around the Sun, represented by the Eddington parameter , with an accuracy of two parts in , thereby improving today's best result by two orders of magnitude. Other mission goals include measurements of the time-rate-of-change of the gravitational constant, and of the gravitational inverse square law at 1.5 AU distances--with up to two orders-of-magnitude improvement for each. The science parameters will be estimated using laser ranging measurements of the distance between an Earth station and an active laser transponder on Phobos capable of reaching mm-level range resolution. A transponder on Phobos sending 0.25 mJ, 10 ps pulses at 1 kHz, and receiving asynchronous 1 kHz pulses…
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