Difference between revisions of "GFDL:Lagrangian point"

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In [[celestial mechanics]], the '''Lagrangian points''', (also '''Lagrange point''', '''L-point''', or '''libration point''') are the five stationary solutions of the circular restricted [[N-body problem#Three-body problem|three-body problem]]. I.e. given two massive bodies in [[circle|circular]] [[orbit]]s around their common [[center of mass]], there are five positions in [[space]] where a third body, of negligible [[mass]], could be placed which would then maintain its position relative to the two massive bodies. As seen in a [[frame of reference]] which [[Rotation|rotates]] with the same period as the two co-orbiting bodies, the [[gravity|gravitational field]]s of two massive bodies combined with the [[centrifugal force]] are in balance at the Lagrangian points, allowing the third body to be stationary relative to the first two bodies.
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[[Image:Lagrange points.jpg|thumb|right|330px|A contour plot of the effective [[potential]] (the [[Hill's Surfaces]]) of a two-body system (the [[Sun]] and [[Earth]] here), showing the five Lagrange points.]]
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The '''Lagrangian points''' (pronounced {{IPA|[ləˈgɹɒn.dʒi.ən]}} or {{IPA|[laˈgʀɑ̃.ʒjɑ̃]}}); also '''Lagrange point''', '''L-point''', or '''[[libration]] point'''), are the five positions in an [[orbit]]al configuration where a small object affected only by [[gravity]] can theoretically be stationary relative to two larger objects (such as a [[satellite]] with respect to the [[Earth]] and [[Moon]]). The Lagrange points mark positions where the combined gravitational pull of the two large masses provides precisely the [[centripetal]] force required to rotate with them. They are analogous to [[geosynchronous orbit]]s in that they allow an object to be in a "fixed" position in space rather than an orbit in which its relative position changes continuously.  
  
In [[1772]], famed Italian mathematician, [[Joseph Louis Lagrange]] was working on the infamous “3 body problem” when he discovered an interesting quirk in the results. Originally, he had set out to discover a way to easily calculate the gravitational interaction between arbitrary numbers of bodies in a system, because [[Newtonian mechanics]] conclude that such a system results in the bodies orbiting [[Chaos theory|chaotically]] until there is a collision, or a body is thrown out of the system so that [[Mechanical equilibrium|equilibrium]] can be achieved. The logic behind this conclusion is that a system with one body is trivial, as it is merely static relative to itself; a system with two bodies is very simple to solve for, as the bodies orbit around their common center of gravity. However, once more than two bodies are introduced, the mathematical calculations go crazy. A situation arises where you would have to calculate every gravitational interaction between every object at every point along its trajectory. Lagrange, however, wanted to make this simpler. He did so with a simple conclusion: “''the trajectory of an object is determined by finding a path that minimizes the [[Action (physics) | action]] over time.''” This is found by subtracting the [[potential energy]] from the [[kinetic energy]]. With this way of thinking, Lagrange re-formulated the classical Newtonian mechanics to give rise to [[Lagrangian mechanics]]. With his new system of calculations, Lagrange’s work led him to [[hypothesis|hypothesize]] how a third body of negligible mass would orbit around two larger bodies which were already orbiting one another. This third body at specific points in its orbit would become stationary to one of its host bodies (planets), these points were named “Lagrangian points” in Lagrange's honor.
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A more precise but technical definition is that the Lagrangian points are the stationary solutions of the circular restricted [[N-body problem#Three-body problem|three-body problem]]. For example, given two massive bodies in circular [[orbit]]s around their common [[center of mass]], there are five positions in space where a third body, of comparatively negligible [[mass]], could be placed which would then maintain its position relative to the two massive bodies. As seen in a [[rotating reference frame]] with the same period as the two co-orbiting bodies, the [[gravitational field]]s of two massive bodies combined with the [[centrifugal force]] are in balance at the Lagrangian points, allowing the third body to be stationary with respect to the first two bodies.
  
In the more general case of [[elliptical]] orbits, there are no longer stationary ''points'' in the same sense: it becomes more of a Lagrangian “area” where the third body makes small odd-shaped orbits about the invisible Lagrangian point; these orbits are commonly referred to as ''halo'' orbits. The Lagrangian points constructed at each point in time as in the circular case form stationary elliptical orbits which are [[Similarity (mathematics)#Geometry|similar]] to the orbits of the massive bodies. This is due to the fact that [[Newton's second law]], <math>p = mv</math> (<math>p</math> the [[impulse]], <math>m</math> the mass and <math>v</math> the velocity), remains [[Invariant (physics)|invariant]] if force and position are scaled by the same factor. That a body at a Lagrangian point orbits with the same period as the two massive bodies in the circular case implies that it has the same ratio of gravitational force to radial distance as they do. This fact is independent of the circularity of the orbits, and it implies that the elliptical orbits traced by the Lagrangian points are solutions of the [[equation of motion]] of the third body.
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==History and concepts==
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In [[1772]], the famed Italian-French mathematician [[Joseph-Louis Lagrange]] was working on the famous [[Three body problem|three-body problem]] when he discovered an interesting quirk in the results. Originally, he had set out to discover a way to easily calculate the gravitational interaction between arbitrary numbers of bodies in a system, because [[Newtonian mechanics]] conclude that such a system results in the bodies orbiting [[chaos theory|chaotically]] until there is a collision, or a body is thrown out of the system so that [[Mechanical equilibrium|equilibrium]] can be achieved. The logic behind this conclusion is that a system with one body is trivial, as it is merely static relative to itself; a system with two bodies is very simple to solve for, as the bodies orbit around their common center of gravity. However, once more than two bodies are introduced, the mathematical calculations become very complicated. A situation arises where you would have to calculate every gravitational interaction between every object at every point along its trajectory.
  
[[image:lagrangepoint1.png|thumb|350px|A diagram showing the five Lagrangian points in a two-body system]]
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Lagrange, however, wanted to make this simpler. He did so with a simple conclusion: ''The trajectory of an object is determined by finding a path that minimizes the [[action (physics)|action]] over time.'' This is found by subtracting the [[potential energy]] from the [[kinetic energy]]. With this way of thinking, Lagrange re-formulated the classical Newtonian mechanics to give rise to [[Lagrangian mechanics]]. With his new system of calculations, Lagrange’s work led him to [[hypothesis|hypothesize]] how a third body of negligible mass would orbit around two larger bodies which were already in a near-circular orbit.  In a frame of reference that rotates with the larger bodies, he found five specific fixed points where the third body experiences zero net force as it follows the circular orbit of its host bodies (planets).<ref>{{fr icon}} {{cite book
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|last= Lagrange
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|first= Joseph-Louis
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|authorlink= Joseph-Louis Lagrange
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|title= Oeuvres de Lagrange
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|year= 1867-1892
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|publisher= Gauthier-Villars
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|chapter = Tome 6, Chapitre II: Essai sur le problème des trois corps
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|pages = 272-292
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|url= http://gallica.bnf.fr/Catalogue/noticesInd/FRBNF30719104.htm}}
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</ref> These points were named “Lagrangian points” in Lagrange's honor.  It took over a hundred years before his mathematical theory was observed with the discovery of the [[Trojan asteroids]] in the 1900s at the Lagrange points of the Sun-Jupiter system.
  
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In the more general case of [[elliptical]] orbits, there are no longer stationary ''points'' in the same sense: it becomes more of a Lagrangian “area”. The Lagrangian points constructed at each point in time as in the circular case form stationary elliptical orbits which are [[Similarity (mathematics)#Geometry|similar]] to the orbits of the massive bodies. This is due to [[Newton's second law]] (<math>d\mathbf{p}/dt=\mathbf{F}</math>), where ''p = mv'' (''p'' the [[momentum]], ''m'' the mass, and ''v'' the velocity) is [[invariant (physics)|invariant]] if force and position are scaled by the same factor. A body at a Lagrangian point orbits with the same period as the two massive bodies in the circular case, implying that it has the same ratio of gravitational force to radial distance as they do. This fact is independent of the circularity of the orbits, and it implies that the elliptical orbits traced by the Lagrangian points are solutions of the [[equation of motion]] of the third body.
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==The Lagrangian points==
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[[image:Lagrange very massive.svg|thumb|350px|A diagram showing the five Lagrangian points in a two-body system with one body far more massive than the other (e.g. the Sun and the Earth).  In such a system L<sub>3</sub>–L<sub>5</sub> will appear to share the secondary's orbit, although in fact they are situated slightly outside it.]]
 
The five Lagrangian points are labeled and defined as follows:
 
The five Lagrangian points are labeled and defined as follows:
  
==L<sub>1</sub>==
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===L<sub>1</sub>===
The '''L<sub>1</sub>''' point lies on the line defined by the two large masses M<sub>1</sub> and M<sub>2</sub>, and between them.
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The '''L<sub>1</sub>''' point lies on the line defined by the two large masses M<sub>1</sub> and M<sub>2</sub>, and between them.  It is the most intuitively understood of the Lagrangian points: the one where the gravitational attractions of the two other objects effectively cancel each other out.
  
'''Example:''' An object which [[orbit]]s the [[Sun]] more closely than the [[Earth]] would normally have a shorter orbital period than the Earth, but that ignores the effect of the Earth's own gravitational pull. If the object is directly between the Earth and the Sun, then the effect of the Earth's gravity is to weaken the force pulling the object towards the Sun, and therefore increase the orbital period of the object. The closer to Earth the object is, the greater this effect is.  At the L<sub>1</sub> point, the orbital period of the object becomes exactly equal to the Earth's orbital period.   
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:'''Example:''' An object which [[orbit]]s the [[Sun]] more closely than the [[Earth]] would normally have a shorter orbital period than the Earth, but that ignores the effect of the Earth's own gravitational pull. If the object is directly between the Earth and the Sun, then the effect of the Earth's gravity is to weaken the force pulling the object towards the Sun, and therefore increase the orbital period of the object. The closer to Earth the object is, the greater this effect is.  At the L<sub>1</sub> point, the orbital period of the object becomes exactly equal to the Earth's orbital period.   
  
The Sun-Earth L<sub>1</sub> is ideal for making observations of the Sun. Objects here are never shadowed by the Earth or the Moon. [[Solar and Heliospheric Observatory]] (SOHO) ([http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/ NASA's site of SOHO project]) is stationed in a halo orbit around L<sub>1</sub>. The Earth-Moon L<sub>1</sub> allows easy access to lunar and earth orbits with minimal [[Delta-v]] and would be ideal for a half-way manned space station for transporting cargo and personnel to the Moon and back.    
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The Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>1</sub> is ideal for making observations of the Sun. Objects here are never shadowed by the Earth or the Moon. The [[Solar and Heliospheric Observatory]] (SOHO) is stationed in a [[Lagrangian point#Stability|Halo orbit]] at the L<sub>1</sub> and the [[Advanced Composition Explorer]] (ACE) is in a [[Lissajous]] orbit, also at the L<sub>1</sub> point. The Earth&ndash;Moon L<sub>1</sub> allows easy access to lunar and earth orbits with minimal [[delta-v]], and would be ideal for a half-way manned space station intended to help transport cargo and personnel to the Moon and back.
  
==L<sub>2</sub>==
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===L<sub>2</sub>===
The '''L<sub>2</sub>''' point lies on the line defined by the two large masses, and beyond the smaller of the two.  
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The '''L<sub>2</sub>''' point lies on the line defined by the two large masses, beyond the smaller of the two.  
  
'''Example:''' On the other side of the Earth, further away from the Sun, the orbital period of an object would normally be greater than that of the Earth. The extra pull of the Earth's gravity decreases the orbital period of the object, and at the L<sub>2</sub> point that orbital period becomes equal to the Earth's.
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:'''Example:''' On the side of the Earth away from the Sun, the orbital period of an object would normally be greater than that of the Earth. The extra pull of the Earth's gravity decreases the orbital period of the object, and at the L<sub>2</sub> point that orbital period becomes equal to the Earth's.
  
Sun-Earth L<sub>2</sub> is a good spot for space-based observatories. Because an object around L2 will maintain the same orientation with respect to the Sun and Earth, shielding and calibration are much simpler. The [[Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe]] is already in orbit around the Sun-Earth L<sub>2</sub>. The proposed [[James Webb Space Telescope]] will be placed at the Sun-Earth L<sub>2</sub>.  Earth-Moon L2 would be a good location for a [[communication satellite]] covering the Moon's far side.
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Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>2</sub> is a good spot for space-based observatories. Because an object around L<sub>2</sub> will maintain the same orientation with respect to the Sun and Earth, shielding and calibration are much simpler. The [[Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe]] is already in orbit around the Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>2</sub>. The future [[Herschel Space Observatory]] and [[Gaia probe]] as well as the proposed [[James Webb Space Telescope]] will be placed at the Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>2</sub>.  Earth&ndash;Moon L<sub>2</sub> would be a good location for a [[communications satellite]] covering the Moon's far side.
  
If M<sub>2</sub> is much smaller than M<sub>1</sub> then L<sub>1</sub> and L<sub>2</sub> are at approximately equal distances ''r'' from M<sub>2</sub>, equal to the radius of the [[Hill sphere]], given by:
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If M<sub>2</sub> is much smaller than M<sub>1</sub>, then L<sub>1</sub> and L<sub>2</sub> are at approximately equal distances ''r'' from M<sub>2</sub>, equal to the radius of the [[Hill sphere]], given by:
  
 
:<math>r \approx R \sqrt[3]{\frac{M_2}{3 M_1}}</math>
 
:<math>r \approx R \sqrt[3]{\frac{M_2}{3 M_1}}</math>
  
where ''R'' is the distance between the two bodies..
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where ''R'' is the distance between the two bodies.
  
This distance can be described as being such that the [[orbital period]] corresponding to a circular orbit with this distance as radius around M<sub>2</sub> in the absence of M<sub>1</sub>, is that of M<sub>2</sub> around M<sub>1</sub>, divided by <math>\sqrt{3}\approx 1.73</math>.
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This distance can be described as being such that the [[orbital period]], corresponding to a circular orbit with this distance as radius around M<sub>2</sub> in the absence of M<sub>1</sub>, is that of M<sub>2</sub> around M<sub>1</sub>, divided by <math>\sqrt{3}\approx 1.73</math>.
  
 
Examples:
 
Examples:
 
*[[Sun]] and [[Earth]]: 1,500,000 km from the Earth
 
*[[Sun]] and [[Earth]]: 1,500,000 km from the Earth
*Earth and [[Moon]]: 61,500 km from the Moon (give or take a few inches)
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*Earth and [[Moon]]: 61,500 km from the Moon
  
==L<sub>3</sub>==
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===L<sub>3</sub>===
The '''L<sub>3</sub>''' point lies on the line defined by the two large masses, and beyond the larger of the two.
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The '''L<sub>3</sub>''' point lies on the line defined by the two large masses, beyond the larger of the two.
  
'''Example:''' A third Lagrangian point, L<sub>3</sub>, exists on the opposite side of the Sun, a little further away from the Sun than the Earth is, where the combined pull of the Earth and Sun again causes the object to orbit with the same period as the Earth.  
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:'''Example:''' L<sub>3</sub> in the Sun&ndash;Earth system exists on the opposite side of the Sun, a little outside the Earth's orbit but slightly closer to the Sun than the Earth is.<ref>This apparent contradiction is because the Sun is also affected by the Earth's gravity, and so orbits around the two bodies' [[barycentre]], which is however well inside the body of the Sun.</ref>  Here, the combined pull of the Earth and Sun again causes the object to orbit with the same period as the Earth. The Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>3</sub> point was a popular place to put a "[[Counter-Earth]]" in pulp [[science fiction]] and [[comic book]]s - though of course, once space based observation was possible via satellites and probes, it was shown to hold no such object.  In actual fact, Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>3</sub> is highly unstable, because the gravitational forces of the other planets outweigh that of the Earth ([[Venus]], for example, comes within 0.3 [[Astronomical unit|AU]] of L<sub>3</sub> every 20 months).
When used with the Sun and the Earth as the two masses, the L<sub>3</sub> point was a popular place to put a "[[Counter-Earth]]" in pulp [[science fiction]] and [[comic book]]s.
 
  
==L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub>==
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===L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub>===
The '''L<sub>4</sub>''' and '''L<sub>5</sub>''' points lie at the third point of an equilateral [[triangle]] with the base of the line defined by the two masses, such that the point is ahead of, or behind, the smaller mass in its orbit around the larger mass.
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[[Image:L4 diagram.svg|thumb|right|200px|Gravitational accelerations at L<sub>4</sub>]]
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The '''L<sub>4</sub>''' and '''L<sub>5</sub>''' points lie at the third corners of the two [[equilateral triangle]]s in the plane of orbit whose common base is the line between the centres of the two masses, such that the point is ahead of (L<sub>4</sub>), or behind (L<sub>5</sub>), the smaller mass with regard to its orbit around the larger mass.
  
L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> are sometimes called ''triangular Lagrange points'' or ''[[Trojan points]]''.
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The reason these points are in balance is that at L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub>, the distances to the two masses are equal. Accordingly, the gravitational forces from the two massive bodies are in the same ratio as the masses of the two bodies, and so the resultant force acts through the [[barycentre]] of the system; additionally, the geometry of the triangle ensures that the [[resultant]] acceleration is to the distance from the barycentre in the same [[ratio]] as for the two massive bodies. The barycentre being both the [[centre of mass]] and centre of rotation of the system, this resultant force is exactly that required to keep a body at the Lagrange point in orbital [[Dynamic equilibrium|equilibrium]] with the rest of the system. (Indeed, the third body need not have negligible mass; the general triangular configuration was discovered by Lagrange in work on the [[3-body problem]].)
  
'''Example:''' The Sun-Earth L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points lie 60° ahead of and 60° behind the Earth in its orbit around the Sun.
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L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> are sometimes called ''triangular Lagrange points'' or ''Trojan points''.  The name ''Trojan points'' comes from the [[Trojan asteroids]] at the Sun-[[Jupiter (planet)|Jupiter]] L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points, which themselves are named after characters from [[Homer]]'s [[Iliad]] (the legendary siege of [[Troy]]). Asteroids at the L4 point, which leads Jupiter are referred to as the '[[List of Trojan asteroids (Greek camp)|Greek camp]]' while at the L5 point they are referred to as the '[[List of Trojan asteroids (Trojan camp)|Trojan camp]]', and asteroids there are (largely) named after characters from the respective sides of the war.
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:'''Examples:'''<br>
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* The Sun&ndash;Earth L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points lie 60° ahead of and 60° behind the Earth as it orbits the Sun. They contain interplanetary dust.
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* The Earth&ndash;Moon L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points lie 60° ahead of and 60° behind the Moon as it orbits the Earth. They also contain interplanetary dust in what is called [[Kordylewski cloud]].
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* The Sun&ndash;Jupiter L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points are occupied by the [[Trojan asteroid]]s.
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* [[Neptune]] has Trojan [[Kuiper Belt Object]]s at its L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points.
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* [[Saturn]]'s moon [[Tethys (moon)|Tethys]] has two much smaller satellites at its L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points named [[Telesto (moon)|Telesto]] and [[Calypso (moon)|Calypso]], respectively.
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* Saturn's moon [[Dione (moon)|Dione]] has smaller moons [[Helene (moon)|Helene]] and [[Polydeuces (moon)|Polydeuces]] at its L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points, respectively.
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* The [[giant impact hypothesis]] suggests that an object named [[Theia (planet)|Theia]] formed at L<sub>4</sub> or L<sub>5</sub> and crashed into the Earth after its orbit destabilized, forming the moon.
  
 
==Stability==
 
==Stability==
The first three Lagrangian points are technically stable only in the plane [[perpendicular]] to the line between the two bodies. This can be seen most easily by considering the L<sub>1</sub> point. A test mass displaced perpendicularly from the central line would feel a force pulling it back towards the equilibrium point. This is because the lateral components of the two masses' gravity would add to produce this force, whereas the components along the axis between them would balance out. However, if an object located at the L<sub>1</sub> point drifted closer to one of the masses, the gravitational attraction it felt from that mass would be greater, and it would be pulled closer. (The pattern is very similar to that of [[tidal force|tidal forces]].)
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The first three Lagrangian points are technically stable only in the plane [[perpendicular]] to the line between the two bodies. This can be seen most easily by considering the L<sub>1</sub> point. A test mass displaced perpendicularly from the central line would feel a force pulling it back towards the equilibrium point. This is because the lateral components of the two masses' gravity would add to produce this force, whereas the components along the axis between them would balance out. However, if an object located at the L<sub>1</sub> point drifted closer to one of the masses, the gravitational attraction it felt from that mass would be greater, and it would be pulled closer. (The pattern is very similar to that of [[tidal force]]s.)
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Although the L<sub>1</sub>, L<sub>2</sub>, and L<sub>3</sub> points are nominally unstable, it turns out that it is possible to find stable periodic orbits around these points, at least in the restricted three-body problem. These perfectly periodic orbits, referred to as "halo" orbits, do not exist in a full n-body dynamical system such as the [[solar system]]. However, quasi-periodic (i.e. bounded but not precisely repeating) orbits following [[Lissajous curve]] trajectories do exist in the n-body system. These quasi-periodic [[Lissajous orbit]]s are what all Lagrangian point missions to date have used. Although they are not perfectly stable, a relatively modest effort at [[Orbital stationkeeping|station keeping]] can allow a spacecraft to stay in a desired Lissajous orbit for an extended period of time. It also turns out that, at least in the case of Sun–Earth L<sub>1</sub> missions, it is actually preferable to place the spacecraft in a large amplitude (100,000–200,000 km) Lissajous orbit instead of having it sit at the Lagrangian point, because this keeps the spacecraft off the direct Sun–Earth line and thereby reduces the impacts of solar interference on the Earth–spacecraft communications links. Another interesting and useful property of the collinear Lagrangian points and their associated Lissajous orbits is that they serve as "gateways" to control the chaotic trajectories of the [[Interplanetary Transport Network]].
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In contrast to the collinear Lagrangian points, the triangular points (L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub>) are stable equilibria (cf. [[attractor]]), provided the ratio of M<sub>1</sub>/M<sub>2</sub> is greater than 24.96<ref>Actually <math>\left(25\left(\frac{1-\sqrt{1-4/625}}{2}\right)\right)^{-1}</math></ref><ref name="cornish">[http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/ContentMedia/lagrange.pdf The Lagrange Points] – Neil J. Cornish with input from Jeremy Goodman</ref>.  This is the case for the Sun/Earth and, by a smaller margin, the Earth/Moon systems.  When a body at these points is perturbed, it moves away from the point, but the [[Coriolis effect]] then acts, and bends the object's path into a stable, [[kidney bean]]‐shaped orbit around the point (as seen in the rotating frame of reference). However, in the Earth-Moon case the problem of stability is greatly complicated by the appreciable solar gravitational influence.<ref>
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{{cite web | url = http://www.rfreitas.com/Astro/SearchIcarus1980.htm | title = A Search for Natural or Artificial Objects Located at the Earth-Moon Libration Points | publisher = Icarus}}</ref>
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==Lagrangian point missions==
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The Lagrangian point orbits have unique characteristics that have made them a good choice for performing some kinds of missions. [[NASA]] has operated a number of spacecraft in orbit around the Sun-Earth L<sub>1</sub> and L<sub>2</sub> points, including
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{| class="wikitable"
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! Mission || Lagrangian point
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|-
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| [[Advanced Composition Explorer|Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE)]] || <div style="text-align:center;">L<sub>1</sub></div>
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|-
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| [[Genesis (spacecraft)|Genesis]] || <div style="text-align:center;">L<sub>1</sub></div>
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|-
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| [[International Cometary Explorer|International Sun/Earth Explorer 3 (ISEE-3)]] || <div style="text-align:center;">L<sub>1</sub></div>
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|-
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| [[Solar and Heliospheric Observatory|Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)]] || <div style="text-align:center;">L<sub>1</sub></div>
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|-
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| [[WMAP|Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP)]] || <div style="text-align:center;">L<sub>2</sub></div>
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|}
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The [[James Webb Space Telescope]] is also planned to be placed in orbit around L<sub>2</sub>.
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The [[L5 Society]] was a precursor of the [[National Space Society]], and promoted the possibility of establishing a colony and manufacturing facility in orbit around the L<sub>4</sub> or L<sub>5</sub> points in the Earth&ndash;Moon system (see [[Space colonization]]).
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==Natural examples==
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In the Sun&ndash;[[Jupiter (planet)|Jupiter]] system several thousand [[asteroid]]s, collectively referred to as [[Trojan asteroid]]s, are in orbits around the Sun&ndash;Jupiter L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points. Other bodies can be found in the Sun&ndash;[[Saturn (planet)|Saturn]], Sun&ndash;[[Mars (planet)|Mars]], Sun-[[Neptune (planet)|Neptune]], Jupiter&ndash;Jovian [[satellite]], and Saturn-Saturnian satellite systems. There are no known large bodies in the Sun&ndash;Earth system's Trojan points, but clouds of dust surrounding the L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points were discovered in the [[1950s]]. Clouds of dust, called [[Kordylewski cloud]]s, even fainter than the notoriously weak [[gegenschein]], are also present in the L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> of the Earth&ndash;[[Moon]] system.
  
Although the L<sub>1</sub>, L<sub>2</sub>, and L<sub>3</sub> points are nominally unstable, it turns out that it is possible to find stable periodic orbits around these points, at least in the restricted three-body problem. These perfectly periodic orbits, referred to as "halo" orbits, do not exist in a full n-body dynamical system such as the solar system. However, quasi-periodic (i.e. bounded but not precisely repeating) [[Lissajous orbits]] do exist in the n-body system. These quasi-periodic orbits are what all libration point missions to date have used. Although they are not perfectly stable, a relatively modest effort at station-keeping can allow a spacecraft to stay in a desired Lissajous orbit for an extended period of time. It also turns out that, at least in the case of Sun-Earth L<sub>1</sub> missions, it is actually preferable to place the spacecraft in a large amplitude (100,000 - 200,000 km) Lissajous orbit instead of having it sit at the libration point, since this keeps the spacecraft off of the direct Sun-earth line and thereby reduces the impacts of solar interference on the Earth-spacecraft communications links. Another interesting and useful property of the collinear libration points and their associated Lissajous orbits is that they serve as "gateways" to control the chaotic trajectories of the [[Interplanetary Superhighway]].
+
The Saturnian moon [[Tethys (moon)|Tethys]] has two smaller moons in its L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points, [[Telesto (moon)|Telesto]] and [[Calypso (moon)|Calypso]]. The Saturnian moon [[Dione (moon)|Dione]] also has two Lagrangian co-orbitals, [[Helene (moon)|Helene]] at its L<sub>4</sub> point and [[Polydeuces (moon)|Polydeuces]] at L<sub>5</sub>. The moons wander [[azimuth]]ally about the Lagrangian points, with Polydeuces describing the largest deviations, moving up to 32 degrees away from the Saturn&ndash;Dione L<sub>5</sub> point. Tethys and Dione are hundreds of times more massive than their "escorts" (see the moons' articles for exact diameter figures; masses are not known in several cases), and Saturn is far more massive still, which makes the overall system stable.
  
By contrast, L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> are stable equilibria (cf. [[attractor]]), provided the ratio of the masses M<sub>1</sub>/M<sub>2</sub> is > 24.96.  This is the case for the Sun/Earth and Earth/Moon systems, though by a smaller margin in the latter.  When a body at these points is perturbed, it moves away from the point, but the [[Coriolis force]] then acts, and bends the object's path into a stable, [[kidney bean]]-shaped orbit around the point (as seen in the rotating frame of reference).
+
===Other co-orbitals===
  
==Examples==
+
The Earth's companion object [[3753 Cruithne]] is in a relationship with the Earth which is somewhat Trojan-like, but different from a true Trojan.  This asteroid occupies one of two regular solar orbits, one of them slightly smaller and faster than the Earth's orbit, and the other slightly larger and slower.  The asteroid periodically alternates between these two orbits due to close encounters with Earth. When the asteroid is in the smaller, faster orbit and approaches the Earth, it loses orbital energy to the Earth and moves into the larger, slower orbit. It then falls farther and farther behind the earth, and eventually Earth approaches it from the other direction.  Then the asteroid gains orbital energy from the Earth, and the asteroid moves back into the smaller orbit, thus beginning the cycle anew.  The cycle has no noticeable impact on the length of the year, because Earth's mass is over 20 [[1000000000 (number)|billion]] (2 &times; 10<sup>10</sup>) times more than 3753 Cruithne. 
  
In the Sun-[[Jupiter (planet)|Jupiter]] system several thousand [[asteroid]]s, collectively referred to as [[Trojan asteroid]]s, are in orbits around the Sun-Jupiter L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points. Other bodies can be found in the Sun-[[Saturn (planet)|Saturn]], Sun-[[Mars (planet)|Mars]], Jupiter-Jovian [[satellite]], and Saturn-Saturnian satellite systems. There are no known large bodies in the Sun-Earth system's Trojan points, but clouds of dust surrounding the L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points were discovered in the [[1950s]]. Clouds of dust, called [[Kordylewski cloud]]s, even fainter than the notoriously weak [[gegenschein]], are also present in the L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> of the Earth-[[Moon]] system.
+
[[Epimetheus (moon)|Epimetheus]] and [[Janus (moon)|Janus]], satellites of Saturn, have a similar relationship, though they are of similar masses and so actually exchange orbits with each other periodically. (Janus is roughly 4 times more massive, but still light enough for its orbit to be altered.) Another similar configuration is known as [[orbital resonance]], in which orbiting bodies tend to have periods of a simple integer [[ratio]], due to their interaction.
  
The Saturnian moon [[Tethys (moon)|Tethys]] has two smaller moons in its L<sub>4</sub> and L<sub>5</sub> points, [[Telesto (moon)|Telesto]] and [[Calypso (moon)|Calypso]]. The Saturnian moon [[Dione (moon)|Dione]] also has two Lagrangian co-orbitals, [[Helene (moon)|Helene]] at its L<sub>4</sub> point and [[Polydeuces (moon)|Polydeuces]] at L<sub>5</sub>.  The moons wander azimuthally about the Lagrangian points, with Polydeuces describing the largest deviations, moving up to 32 degrees away from the Saturn-Dione L<sub>5</sub> point.  Tethys and Dione are hundreds of times more massive than their "escorts" (see the moons' articles for exact diameter figures, masses are not known in several cases), and Saturn is far more massive still, which makes the overall system stable. 
+
==In fiction==
  
The [[L5 Society]] is a precursor of the [[National Space Society]], and promoted the possibility of establishing a colony and manufacturing facility in orbit around the L<sub>4</sub> and/or L<sub>5</sub> points in the Earth-Moon system (see [[Space colonisation]]).
+
*The Lagrange points are mentioned in [[science fiction]] from time to time (most often [[hard science fiction]]), but, due to the general lack of public familiarity with them, they are rarely used as a plot device or reference.
  
==Other co-orbitals==
+
*Lagrange points are mentioned most famously in the science fiction film ''[[2010: The Year We Make Contact]]'', where the Discovery spacecraft is located on a Lagrange point.
  
The Earth's companion object [[3753 Cruithne]] is in a somewhat Trojan-like orbit around the Earth, but not in the same manner as a true Trojan.  Rather, it occupies one of two regular solar orbits, periodically alternating between the two due to close encounters with Earth. When the asteroid approaches Earth, it takes orbital energy from Earth and moves into a larger, higher energy orbit. Some time later, the Earth catches up with the asteroid (which is in a larger and slower orbit), at which time Earth takes the energy back and so the asteroid falls into a smaller, faster orbit and eventually catches Earth to begin the cycle anew. This has no noticeable impact on the length of the year, since Earth masses over 20 [[billion]] times more than 3753 Cruithne.
+
*The Lagrange points are mentioned in the [[anime]] saga ''[[Mobile Suit Gundam]]'', where clusters of space colonies (called "Sides") are located at the five Lagrange points of Earth, in addition to resource satellites and space fortresses. Lagrange Points have been mentioned in several other Gundam series as well.
  
[[Epimetheus (moon)|Epimetheus]] and [[Janus (moon)|Janus]], satellites of Saturn, have a similar relationship, though they are of similar masses and so actually exchange orbits with each other periodically. (Janus is roughly 4 times more massive, but still light enough for its orbit to be altered.) Another similar configuration is known as [[orbital resonance]], in which orbiting bodies tend to have periods of a simple integer [[ratio]], due to their interaction.  
+
*The L5 Lagrange point is mentioned in ''L5: First City in Space'', an early [[IMAX]] 3D movie.
 +
 
 +
*In William Gibson's novel [[Neuromancer]], much of the action takes place in the L5 "archipelago", the location of many space stations.
 +
 
 +
*Lagrange points also play a role in the Larry Niven/Jerry Pournelle classic ''[[The Mote in God's Eye]]''.
 +
 
 +
*The eponymous interplanetary [[relay station]] in [[George O. Smith]]'s "[[Venus Equilateral]]" stories was located in the L<sub>4</sub> point of the Sun-Venus system.
 +
 
 +
*In Robert Forward's Rocheworld the locations for Lagrange points around a binary planet are disscussed in contrast to typical system.
 +
 
 +
*The planet [[Troas (planet)|Troas]] in the stories "[[Sucker Bait]]" by [[Isaac Asimov]] and "[[Question and Answer]]" by [[Poul Anderson]] was located in the L<sub>5</sub> point of a fictional [[binary star]] system.
 +
 
 +
*In the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode, "[[The Survivors (TNG episode)|The Survivors]]", the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D)|Enterprise]] is surprised by an enemy ship that had been hiding in a Lagrange point.
 +
 
 +
*The space station ''[[Babylon 5]]'' is described to be located "at the L-5 point in a binary star system between a moon and a barren, lifeless planet." [http://www.ralentz.com/old/sci-fi/b5/b5-info.html]
 +
 
 +
*In the [[I-War (Independence War)|Independence War]] computer games, Lagrange points are used as the only locations for [[Jump drive|jump-points]].
 +
 
 +
*In the [[Battletech]] game series, a star's Nadir and Zenith are the standard hyperspace jump points for most interstellar spacecraft.  Lagrange points (usually the L4 and L5 points) are sometimes used to enter a system closer to planets, almost always for small-scale military or pirate operations due to the risk of catastrophic misjumps.
 +
 
 +
*In the [[Personal computer|PC]] [[Computer and video games|video game]] ''[[Star Wars: X-Wing computer game series|Star Wars: X-Wing]]'', Lagrange points are mentioned in the briefings of some missions that revolve around attacking objects placed at them.
 +
 
 +
*In the [[Xbox]] [[Computer and video games|video game]] ''[[Halo: Combat Evolved]]'' ([[2001]]) and sequel ''[[Halo 2]]'' ([[2004]]), [[Halo (megastructure)|Halo Megastructures]] play key locations throughout the games. In ''[[Halo: Combat Evolved|Halo: CE]]'' and ''[[Halo 2]]'', the Halo structures are in L1 Lagrange points between the Gas Giants (and a moon) [[Threshold (fictional planet)|Threshold]] and Substance, respectively.
 +
 
 +
*In the Halo novels the Lagrange points are the only places where a human ship can safely make a slipspace jump.
 +
 
 +
*In the [[Robert A. Heinlein]] novel ''[[The Number of the Beast (novel)|The Number of the Beast]]'', two of the main characters engage in a discussion of adding [[planets]] to the [[solar system]] at Lagrange points.
 +
 
 +
*In [[Hideo Kojima]]'s video game ''[[Policenauts]]'', the setting of the game, an [[O'Neill cylinder|O'Neill model space colony]], is located at the L5 Lagrange point.
 +
 
 +
*In the sci-fi series [[Stargate Atlantis]] there was a defensive satellite located at a Lagrangian point in the solar system in which Atlantis was located.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Siege_%28Stargate_Atlantis%29]
 +
 
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*In the Hugo Award-winning novel [[A Deepness in the Sky]] by [[Vernor Vinge]], a temporary human habitat is built at the L1 point between the planet Arachna and its primary star, a highly [[variable star|variable]] [[dwarf star|dwarf]] called the On/Off Star.
 +
 
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*In [[Peter F Hamilton]]'s [[Night's dawn|Night's Dawn Trilogy]], a ZTT jump drive cannot be used in a strong gravitational field. In the first book of the trilogy, [[The Reality Dysfunction]], the main characters cannot escape from a gas giant's gravity well before their pursuers catch up with them. Instead, they race to the Lagrange point between the gas giant and one of its moons in order to activate their drive. Successful execution of this untried and reckless maneuver gains captain Joshua Calvert the nickname "LaGrange" Calvert. In the second book [[The Neutronium Alchemist]], a visit is paid to the supposed home planet of the Kiint, Jobis, which features three moons orbiting the Lagrange One point, rotating around a common centre.
 +
 
 +
*In the TV series [[Quatermass]] II, the hostile aliens live on a small asteroid "no more than half a mile across" at a "theoretical point of equilibrium" on the dark side of the earth, although neither L2 or Lagrange are mentioned by name (the term "Bieber Variation" is used instead).
 +
 
 +
*In Arthur Clarke and Stephen Baxter's novel Sunstorm L1 point plays a crucial role in the building of a shield that has the purpose of saving Earth from a storm of energy from the Sun.
 +
 
 +
*In the manga series [[Battle Angel Alita: Last Order]], the ex-colony ship turned space station ''Leviathan 1'' is at the L2 point in the Earth/Moon system.
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 +
*In 1991, Konami released a science fiction RPG for the NES in Japan called [[Lagrange Point (game)|Lagrange Point.]]
 +
 
 +
==Notes and references==
 +
<references/>
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
*[[List of objects at the Sun-Earth Lagrangian points]]
+
*[[List of objects at Lagrangian points]]
*[[Interplanetary Superhighway]]
 
*[[Hill sphere]]
 
*[[Kordylewski clouds]]
 
 
*[[Lunar space elevator]]
 
*[[Lunar space elevator]]
*[[Big Splash]]
+
*[[Home on Lagrange (The L5 Song)]]
 +
*[[L5 Society]]
 +
*[[Colonization of the Sun (Lagrange Points)]]
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.physics.montana.edu/faculty/cornish/lagrange.html Explanation of Lagrange points by Prof. Neil J. Cornish]
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*[http://www.physics.montana.edu/faculty/cornish/lagrange.html Explanation of Lagrange points] – Prof. Neil J. Cornish
*[http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/lagrange.html Explanation of Lagrange points by Prof. John Baez]
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*[http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/m_mm/ob_techorbit1.html A NASA explanation] - also attributed to Neil J. Cornish
*[http://patter.mine.nu/Home-on-lagrange.htm Home On Lagrange (filksong)]
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*[http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/lagrange.html Explanation of Lagrange points] – Prof. John Baez
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*[http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/gravity4.htm Geometry and calculations of Lagrange points] – Dr J R Stockton
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*[http://www.phy6.org/stargaze/Slagrang.htm Locations of Lagrange points, with approximations] – Dr. David P. Stern
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Revision as of 14:00, 11 April 2007

File:Lagrange points.jpg
A contour plot of the effective potential (the Hill's Surfaces) of a two-body system (the Sun and Earth here), showing the five Lagrange points.

The Lagrangian points (pronounced Template:IPA or Template:IPA); also Lagrange point, L-point, or libration point), are the five positions in an orbital configuration where a small object affected only by gravity can theoretically be stationary relative to two larger objects (such as a satellite with respect to the Earth and Moon). The Lagrange points mark positions where the combined gravitational pull of the two large masses provides precisely the centripetal force required to rotate with them. They are analogous to geosynchronous orbits in that they allow an object to be in a "fixed" position in space rather than an orbit in which its relative position changes continuously.

A more precise but technical definition is that the Lagrangian points are the stationary solutions of the circular restricted three-body problem. For example, given two massive bodies in circular orbits around their common center of mass, there are five positions in space where a third body, of comparatively negligible mass, could be placed which would then maintain its position relative to the two massive bodies. As seen in a rotating reference frame with the same period as the two co-orbiting bodies, the gravitational fields of two massive bodies combined with the centrifugal force are in balance at the Lagrangian points, allowing the third body to be stationary with respect to the first two bodies.

History and concepts

In 1772, the famed Italian-French mathematician Joseph-Louis Lagrange was working on the famous three-body problem when he discovered an interesting quirk in the results. Originally, he had set out to discover a way to easily calculate the gravitational interaction between arbitrary numbers of bodies in a system, because Newtonian mechanics conclude that such a system results in the bodies orbiting chaotically until there is a collision, or a body is thrown out of the system so that equilibrium can be achieved. The logic behind this conclusion is that a system with one body is trivial, as it is merely static relative to itself; a system with two bodies is very simple to solve for, as the bodies orbit around their common center of gravity. However, once more than two bodies are introduced, the mathematical calculations become very complicated. A situation arises where you would have to calculate every gravitational interaction between every object at every point along its trajectory.

Lagrange, however, wanted to make this simpler. He did so with a simple conclusion: The trajectory of an object is determined by finding a path that minimizes the action over time. This is found by subtracting the potential energy from the kinetic energy. With this way of thinking, Lagrange re-formulated the classical Newtonian mechanics to give rise to Lagrangian mechanics. With his new system of calculations, Lagrange’s work led him to hypothesize how a third body of negligible mass would orbit around two larger bodies which were already in a near-circular orbit. In a frame of reference that rotates with the larger bodies, he found five specific fixed points where the third body experiences zero net force as it follows the circular orbit of its host bodies (planets).[1] These points were named “Lagrangian points” in Lagrange's honor. It took over a hundred years before his mathematical theory was observed with the discovery of the Trojan asteroids in the 1900s at the Lagrange points of the Sun-Jupiter system.

In the more general case of elliptical orbits, there are no longer stationary points in the same sense: it becomes more of a Lagrangian “area”. The Lagrangian points constructed at each point in time as in the circular case form stationary elliptical orbits which are similar to the orbits of the massive bodies. This is due to Newton's second law (<math>d\mathbf{p}/dt=\mathbf{F}</math>), where p = mv (p the momentum, m the mass, and v the velocity) is invariant if force and position are scaled by the same factor. A body at a Lagrangian point orbits with the same period as the two massive bodies in the circular case, implying that it has the same ratio of gravitational force to radial distance as they do. This fact is independent of the circularity of the orbits, and it implies that the elliptical orbits traced by the Lagrangian points are solutions of the equation of motion of the third body.

The Lagrangian points

File:Lagrange very massive.svg
A diagram showing the five Lagrangian points in a two-body system with one body far more massive than the other (e.g. the Sun and the Earth). In such a system L3–L5 will appear to share the secondary's orbit, although in fact they are situated slightly outside it.

The five Lagrangian points are labeled and defined as follows:

L1

The L1 point lies on the line defined by the two large masses M1 and M2, and between them. It is the most intuitively understood of the Lagrangian points: the one where the gravitational attractions of the two other objects effectively cancel each other out.

Example: An object which orbits the Sun more closely than the Earth would normally have a shorter orbital period than the Earth, but that ignores the effect of the Earth's own gravitational pull. If the object is directly between the Earth and the Sun, then the effect of the Earth's gravity is to weaken the force pulling the object towards the Sun, and therefore increase the orbital period of the object. The closer to Earth the object is, the greater this effect is. At the L1 point, the orbital period of the object becomes exactly equal to the Earth's orbital period.

The Sun–Earth L1 is ideal for making observations of the Sun. Objects here are never shadowed by the Earth or the Moon. The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) is stationed in a Halo orbit at the L1 and the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) is in a Lissajous orbit, also at the L1 point. The Earth–Moon L1 allows easy access to lunar and earth orbits with minimal delta-v, and would be ideal for a half-way manned space station intended to help transport cargo and personnel to the Moon and back.

L2

The L2 point lies on the line defined by the two large masses, beyond the smaller of the two.

Example: On the side of the Earth away from the Sun, the orbital period of an object would normally be greater than that of the Earth. The extra pull of the Earth's gravity decreases the orbital period of the object, and at the L2 point that orbital period becomes equal to the Earth's.

Sun–Earth L2 is a good spot for space-based observatories. Because an object around L2 will maintain the same orientation with respect to the Sun and Earth, shielding and calibration are much simpler. The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe is already in orbit around the Sun–Earth L2. The future Herschel Space Observatory and Gaia probe as well as the proposed James Webb Space Telescope will be placed at the Sun–Earth L2. Earth–Moon L2 would be a good location for a communications satellite covering the Moon's far side.

If M2 is much smaller than M1, then L1 and L2 are at approximately equal distances r from M2, equal to the radius of the Hill sphere, given by:

<math>r \approx R \sqrt[3]{\frac{M_2}{3 M_1}}</math>

where R is the distance between the two bodies.

This distance can be described as being such that the orbital period, corresponding to a circular orbit with this distance as radius around M2 in the absence of M1, is that of M2 around M1, divided by <math>\sqrt{3}\approx 1.73</math>.

Examples:

  • Sun and Earth: 1,500,000 km from the Earth
  • Earth and Moon: 61,500 km from the Moon

L3

The L3 point lies on the line defined by the two large masses, beyond the larger of the two.

Example: L3 in the Sun–Earth system exists on the opposite side of the Sun, a little outside the Earth's orbit but slightly closer to the Sun than the Earth is.[2] Here, the combined pull of the Earth and Sun again causes the object to orbit with the same period as the Earth. The Sun–Earth L3 point was a popular place to put a "Counter-Earth" in pulp science fiction and comic books - though of course, once space based observation was possible via satellites and probes, it was shown to hold no such object. In actual fact, Sun–Earth L3 is highly unstable, because the gravitational forces of the other planets outweigh that of the Earth (Venus, for example, comes within 0.3 AU of L3 every 20 months).

L4 and L5

File:L4 diagram.svg
Gravitational accelerations at L4

The L4 and L5 points lie at the third corners of the two equilateral triangles in the plane of orbit whose common base is the line between the centres of the two masses, such that the point is ahead of (L4), or behind (L5), the smaller mass with regard to its orbit around the larger mass.

The reason these points are in balance is that at L4 and L5, the distances to the two masses are equal. Accordingly, the gravitational forces from the two massive bodies are in the same ratio as the masses of the two bodies, and so the resultant force acts through the barycentre of the system; additionally, the geometry of the triangle ensures that the resultant acceleration is to the distance from the barycentre in the same ratio as for the two massive bodies. The barycentre being both the centre of mass and centre of rotation of the system, this resultant force is exactly that required to keep a body at the Lagrange point in orbital equilibrium with the rest of the system. (Indeed, the third body need not have negligible mass; the general triangular configuration was discovered by Lagrange in work on the 3-body problem.)

L4 and L5 are sometimes called triangular Lagrange points or Trojan points. The name Trojan points comes from the Trojan asteroids at the Sun-Jupiter L4 and L5 points, which themselves are named after characters from Homer's Iliad (the legendary siege of Troy). Asteroids at the L4 point, which leads Jupiter are referred to as the 'Greek camp' while at the L5 point they are referred to as the 'Trojan camp', and asteroids there are (largely) named after characters from the respective sides of the war.

Examples:
  • The Sun–Earth L4 and L5 points lie 60° ahead of and 60° behind the Earth as it orbits the Sun. They contain interplanetary dust.
  • The Earth–Moon L4 and L5 points lie 60° ahead of and 60° behind the Moon as it orbits the Earth. They also contain interplanetary dust in what is called Kordylewski cloud.
  • The Sun–Jupiter L4 and L5 points are occupied by the Trojan asteroids.
  • Neptune has Trojan Kuiper Belt Objects at its L4 and L5 points.
  • Saturn's moon Tethys has two much smaller satellites at its L4 and L5 points named Telesto and Calypso, respectively.
  • Saturn's moon Dione has smaller moons Helene and Polydeuces at its L4 and L5 points, respectively.
  • The giant impact hypothesis suggests that an object named Theia formed at L4 or L5 and crashed into the Earth after its orbit destabilized, forming the moon.

Stability

The first three Lagrangian points are technically stable only in the plane perpendicular to the line between the two bodies. This can be seen most easily by considering the L1 point. A test mass displaced perpendicularly from the central line would feel a force pulling it back towards the equilibrium point. This is because the lateral components of the two masses' gravity would add to produce this force, whereas the components along the axis between them would balance out. However, if an object located at the L1 point drifted closer to one of the masses, the gravitational attraction it felt from that mass would be greater, and it would be pulled closer. (The pattern is very similar to that of tidal forces.)

Although the L1, L2, and L3 points are nominally unstable, it turns out that it is possible to find stable periodic orbits around these points, at least in the restricted three-body problem. These perfectly periodic orbits, referred to as "halo" orbits, do not exist in a full n-body dynamical system such as the solar system. However, quasi-periodic (i.e. bounded but not precisely repeating) orbits following Lissajous curve trajectories do exist in the n-body system. These quasi-periodic Lissajous orbits are what all Lagrangian point missions to date have used. Although they are not perfectly stable, a relatively modest effort at station keeping can allow a spacecraft to stay in a desired Lissajous orbit for an extended period of time. It also turns out that, at least in the case of Sun–Earth L1 missions, it is actually preferable to place the spacecraft in a large amplitude (100,000–200,000 km) Lissajous orbit instead of having it sit at the Lagrangian point, because this keeps the spacecraft off the direct Sun–Earth line and thereby reduces the impacts of solar interference on the Earth–spacecraft communications links. Another interesting and useful property of the collinear Lagrangian points and their associated Lissajous orbits is that they serve as "gateways" to control the chaotic trajectories of the Interplanetary Transport Network.

In contrast to the collinear Lagrangian points, the triangular points (L4 and L5) are stable equilibria (cf. attractor), provided the ratio of M1/M2 is greater than 24.96[3][4]. This is the case for the Sun/Earth and, by a smaller margin, the Earth/Moon systems. When a body at these points is perturbed, it moves away from the point, but the Coriolis effect then acts, and bends the object's path into a stable, kidney bean‐shaped orbit around the point (as seen in the rotating frame of reference). However, in the Earth-Moon case the problem of stability is greatly complicated by the appreciable solar gravitational influence.[5]

Lagrangian point missions

The Lagrangian point orbits have unique characteristics that have made them a good choice for performing some kinds of missions. NASA has operated a number of spacecraft in orbit around the Sun-Earth L1 and L2 points, including

Mission Lagrangian point
Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE)
L1
Genesis
L1
International Sun/Earth Explorer 3 (ISEE-3)
L1
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)
L1
Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP)
L2

The James Webb Space Telescope is also planned to be placed in orbit around L2.

The L5 Society was a precursor of the National Space Society, and promoted the possibility of establishing a colony and manufacturing facility in orbit around the L4 or L5 points in the Earth–Moon system (see Space colonization).

Natural examples

In the Sun–Jupiter system several thousand asteroids, collectively referred to as Trojan asteroids, are in orbits around the Sun–Jupiter L4 and L5 points. Other bodies can be found in the Sun–Saturn, Sun–Mars, Sun-Neptune, Jupiter–Jovian satellite, and Saturn-Saturnian satellite systems. There are no known large bodies in the Sun–Earth system's Trojan points, but clouds of dust surrounding the L4 and L5 points were discovered in the 1950s. Clouds of dust, called Kordylewski clouds, even fainter than the notoriously weak gegenschein, are also present in the L4 and L5 of the Earth–Moon system.

The Saturnian moon Tethys has two smaller moons in its L4 and L5 points, Telesto and Calypso. The Saturnian moon Dione also has two Lagrangian co-orbitals, Helene at its L4 point and Polydeuces at L5. The moons wander azimuthally about the Lagrangian points, with Polydeuces describing the largest deviations, moving up to 32 degrees away from the Saturn–Dione L5 point. Tethys and Dione are hundreds of times more massive than their "escorts" (see the moons' articles for exact diameter figures; masses are not known in several cases), and Saturn is far more massive still, which makes the overall system stable.

Other co-orbitals

The Earth's companion object 3753 Cruithne is in a relationship with the Earth which is somewhat Trojan-like, but different from a true Trojan. This asteroid occupies one of two regular solar orbits, one of them slightly smaller and faster than the Earth's orbit, and the other slightly larger and slower. The asteroid periodically alternates between these two orbits due to close encounters with Earth. When the asteroid is in the smaller, faster orbit and approaches the Earth, it loses orbital energy to the Earth and moves into the larger, slower orbit. It then falls farther and farther behind the earth, and eventually Earth approaches it from the other direction. Then the asteroid gains orbital energy from the Earth, and the asteroid moves back into the smaller orbit, thus beginning the cycle anew. The cycle has no noticeable impact on the length of the year, because Earth's mass is over 20 billion (2 × 1010) times more than 3753 Cruithne.

Epimetheus and Janus, satellites of Saturn, have a similar relationship, though they are of similar masses and so actually exchange orbits with each other periodically. (Janus is roughly 4 times more massive, but still light enough for its orbit to be altered.) Another similar configuration is known as orbital resonance, in which orbiting bodies tend to have periods of a simple integer ratio, due to their interaction.

In fiction

  • The Lagrange points are mentioned in science fiction from time to time (most often hard science fiction), but, due to the general lack of public familiarity with them, they are rarely used as a plot device or reference.
  • Lagrange points are mentioned most famously in the science fiction film 2010: The Year We Make Contact, where the Discovery spacecraft is located on a Lagrange point.
  • The Lagrange points are mentioned in the anime saga Mobile Suit Gundam, where clusters of space colonies (called "Sides") are located at the five Lagrange points of Earth, in addition to resource satellites and space fortresses. Lagrange Points have been mentioned in several other Gundam series as well.
  • The L5 Lagrange point is mentioned in L5: First City in Space, an early IMAX 3D movie.
  • In William Gibson's novel Neuromancer, much of the action takes place in the L5 "archipelago", the location of many space stations.
  • In Robert Forward's Rocheworld the locations for Lagrange points around a binary planet are disscussed in contrast to typical system.
  • The space station Babylon 5 is described to be located "at the L-5 point in a binary star system between a moon and a barren, lifeless planet." [1]
  • In the Battletech game series, a star's Nadir and Zenith are the standard hyperspace jump points for most interstellar spacecraft. Lagrange points (usually the L4 and L5 points) are sometimes used to enter a system closer to planets, almost always for small-scale military or pirate operations due to the risk of catastrophic misjumps.
  • In the PC video game Star Wars: X-Wing, Lagrange points are mentioned in the briefings of some missions that revolve around attacking objects placed at them.
  • In the Halo novels the Lagrange points are the only places where a human ship can safely make a slipspace jump.
  • In the sci-fi series Stargate Atlantis there was a defensive satellite located at a Lagrangian point in the solar system in which Atlantis was located.[2]
  • In Peter F Hamilton's Night's Dawn Trilogy, a ZTT jump drive cannot be used in a strong gravitational field. In the first book of the trilogy, The Reality Dysfunction, the main characters cannot escape from a gas giant's gravity well before their pursuers catch up with them. Instead, they race to the Lagrange point between the gas giant and one of its moons in order to activate their drive. Successful execution of this untried and reckless maneuver gains captain Joshua Calvert the nickname "LaGrange" Calvert. In the second book The Neutronium Alchemist, a visit is paid to the supposed home planet of the Kiint, Jobis, which features three moons orbiting the Lagrange One point, rotating around a common centre.
  • In the TV series Quatermass II, the hostile aliens live on a small asteroid "no more than half a mile across" at a "theoretical point of equilibrium" on the dark side of the earth, although neither L2 or Lagrange are mentioned by name (the term "Bieber Variation" is used instead).
  • In Arthur Clarke and Stephen Baxter's novel Sunstorm L1 point plays a crucial role in the building of a shield that has the purpose of saving Earth from a storm of energy from the Sun.
  • In 1991, Konami released a science fiction RPG for the NES in Japan called Lagrange Point.

Notes and references

  1. Template:Fr icon Template:Cite book
  2. This apparent contradiction is because the Sun is also affected by the Earth's gravity, and so orbits around the two bodies' barycentre, which is however well inside the body of the Sun.
  3. Actually <math>\left(25\left(\frac{1-\sqrt{1-4/625}}{2}\right)\right)^{-1}</math>
  4. The Lagrange Points – Neil J. Cornish with input from Jeremy Goodman
  5. Template:Cite web

See also

External links

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