New Concept for Testing General Relativity: The Laser Astrometric Test of Relativity (LATOR) Mission
Slava G. Turyshev, Michael Shao, Kenneth Nordtvedt Jr

TL;DR
The LATOR mission proposes a highly precise laser interferometry experiment to test general relativity and measure relativistic effects near the Sun, aiming to detect deviations or extensions of Einstein's theory.
Contribution
It introduces a novel space-based laser interferometry setup on the ISS for unprecedented tests of relativistic gravity effects and parameters.
Findings
Improves measurement of PPN gamma to 1 part in 10^8
Enables detection of next-order light deflection effects
Precisely measures solar quadrupole moment J2
Abstract
This paper discusses new Fundamental physics experiment that will test relativistic gravity at the accuracy better than the effects of the second order in the gravitational field strength, ~G^2. The Laser Astrometric Test Of Relativity (LATOR) mission uses laser interferometry between two micro-spacecraft whose lines of sight pass close by the Sun to accurately measure deflection of light in the solar gravity. The key element of the experimental design is a redundant geometry optical truss provided by a long-baseline (100 m) multi-channel stellar optical interferometer placed on the International Space Station (ISS). The spatial interferometer is used for measuring the angles between the two spacecraft and for orbit determination purposes. LATOR will not only improve the value of the parameterized post-Newtonian (PPN) to unprecedented levels of accuracy of 1 part in 10e8, it…
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