Solar System limits on gravitational dipoles
Indranil Banik, Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
This paper tests a gravitational dipole theory suggesting antimatter has negative gravitational mass, using Solar System data, and finds it inconsistent with observations, thus falsifying the theory.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive Solar System constraint on the gravitational dipole theory, challenging its viability with precise spacecraft tracking data.
Findings
Cassini data limits deviations to 160 meters
The theory cannot match galaxy rotation curves and Solar System constraints simultaneously
Gravitational dipole theory is falsified at high significance
Abstract
The gravitational dipole theory of Hadjukovic (2010) is based on the hypothesis that antimatter has a negative gravitational mass and thus falls upwards on Earth. Astrophysically, the model is similar to but more fundamental than Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND), with the Newtonian gravity towards an isolated point mass boosted by the factor , where and m/s is the MOND acceleration constant. We show that must lie in the range to acceptably fit galaxy rotation curves. In the Solar System, this interpolating function implies an extra Sunwards acceleration of . This would cause Saturn to deviate from Newtonian expectations by km over 15 years, starting from known initial position…
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