Post-Newtonian gravity and Gaia-like astrometry. Effect of PPN $\gamma$ uncertainty on parallaxes
A. G. Butkevich, A. Vecchiato, B. Bucciarelli, M. Gai, M. Crosta, M., G. Lattanzi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how uncertainties in the PPN gamma parameter, which measures gravitational light deflection, affect Gaia-like astrometric parallax measurements, revealing a small but latitude-dependent bias.
Contribution
It provides an analytical and numerical analysis of the impact of PPN gamma deviations on parallax estimates, including a formula for the bias and validation through simulations.
Findings
Parallax bias due to gamma deviation is globally shifted.
Bias depends on satellite distance, Sun angle, and gamma uncertainty.
Effect varies with ecliptic latitude and Gaia scanning law asymmetry.
Abstract
Relativistic models of light propagation adopted for high-precision astrometry are based on the parametrised post-Newtonian formalism, which provides a framework for examining the effects of a hypothetical violation of general relativity on astrometric data. Astrometric observations are strongly affected by the post-Newtonian parameter describing the strength of gravitational light deflection. We study both analytically and numerically how a deviation in the PPN parameter from unity, which is the value predicted by general relativity, affects the parallax estimations in Gaia-like astrometry. Changes in the observable quantities produced by a small variation in PPN were calculated analytically. We then considered how such variations of the observables are reflected in the parallax estimations, and we performed numerical simulations to check the theoretical…
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