Solar system constraints on planetary Coriolis-type effects induced by rotation of distant masses
Lorenzo Iorio

TL;DR
This paper uses solar system planetary data to set constraints on the rotation of distant masses and cosmic rotation effects, providing bounds on parameters like mbda and H_0, and testing models involving cosmic and galactic rotation.
Contribution
It analytically derives orbital precession effects due to Coriolis-like forces from distant mass rotation and compares predictions with planetary data to constrain cosmic rotation parameters.
Findings
Constraints on mbda and H_0 consistent with cosmological observations.
Disagreement with expected galactic rotation value at over 3- significance.
Limits on cosmic rotation parameters from planetary perihelion precessions.
Abstract
We phenomenologically put local constraints on the rotation of distant masses by using the planets of the solar system. First, we analytically compute the orbital secular precessions induced on the motion of a test particle about a massive primary by a Coriolis-like force, treated as a small perturbation of first order in the rotation, in the case of a constant angular velocity vector \Psi directed along a generic direction in space. The semimajor axis a and the eccentricity e of the test particle do not secularly precess, contrary to the inclination I, the longitude of the ascending node \Omega, the longitude of the pericenter \varpi and the mean anomaly M. Then, we compare our prediction for <\dot\varpi> with the corrections \Delta\dot\varpi to the usual perihelion precessions of the inner planets recently estimated by fitting long data sets with different versions of the EPM…
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