Abstract
The lunar disturbing function for a close-Earth satellite is expressed as a sum of products of harmonics of the satellite's position and harmonics of the Moon's position, and the latter are expanded about a rotating and precessing elliptic orbit inclined to the ecliptic. The deviations of the Moon from this approximate orbit are computed from Brown's lunar theory andthe perturbations in satellite orbital elements due to these inequalities are derived. Numerical calculations indicate that several perturbations in the position of the satellite's node and perigee have magnitudes on the order of one meter.
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The author is supported in part by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship.
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Cok, D.R. On the perturbations of a close-Earth satellite due to lunar inequalities. Celestial Mechanics 16, 459–479 (1977). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01229288
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01229288