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''For further closely related mathematical developments see also [[Two-body problem]], also [[Gravitational two-body problem]], also [[Kepler orbit]], and [[Kepler problem]]''
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The '''equation of the center''', in [[astronomy]] and [[ellipse|elliptical motion]], is equal to the [[true anomaly]] minus the [[mean anomaly]], i.e. the difference between the actual angular position in the elliptical orbit and the position the orbiting body would have if its angular motion was uniform. It arises from the ellipticity of the orbit, is zero at [[pericenter]] and [[apocenter]], and reaches its greatest amount nearly midway between these points.
 
The "equation" in the present sense comes from astronomy. It was specified and used by [[Kepler]],
as that variable quantity determined by calculation which must be added or subtracted from the mean motion to obtain the true motion. It is based on ''aequatio, -onis, f.'' in [[Latin]]. In the expression "[[Equation of time|equation of time]]" used in astronomy, the term "equation" has a similar meaning.<ref>{{cite book|last=Michel Capderou|title=Satellites: orbits and missions|publisher=Springe|year=2005|pages=23|isbn=978-2-287-21317-5}}</ref>
 
==Analytical expansions==
 
For small values of orbital [[eccentricity (orbit)|eccentricity]], <math>e</math>, the true anomaly, <math>\nu\ </math>, may be expressed as a [[sine]] series of the mean anomaly, <math>M</math>. The following shows the series expanded to terms of the order of <math>e^3</math>:
 
:<math>\nu = M + (2 e - \frac{1}{4} e^3) \sin M + \frac{5}{4} e^2 \sin 2 M + \frac{13}{12} e^3 \sin 3 M + ...</math>
 
Related expansions may be used to express the true distance <math>r</math> of the orbiting body from the central body as a fraction of the [[semi-major axis]] <math>a</math> of the ellipse,
 
:<math>\frac{r}{a} = (1 + e^2 /2) - (e - \frac{3}{8}e^3) \cos M - \frac{1}{2} e^2 \cos 2 M - \frac{3}{8} e^3 \cos 3 M - ...</math> ;
 
or the inverse of this distance <math>a/r</math> has sometimes been used (e.g. it is proportional to the horizontal [[Parallax#Lunar parallax|parallax]] of the orbiting body as seen from the central body):
 
:<math>\frac{a}{r} = 1 + (e -e^3/8) \cos M + e^2 \cos 2 M + \frac{9}{8} e^3 \cos 3 M + ...</math> .
 
Series such as these can be used as part of the preparation of approximate tables of motion of astronomical objects, such as that of the [[moon]] around the [[earth]], or the earth or other [[planet]]s around the [[sun]], when [[Perturbation (astronomy)|perturbations]] of the motion are included as well.
 
==Moon's equation of the center==
In the case of the moon, its orbit around the earth has an eccentricity of approximately 0.0549. The term in <math>\sin(M)</math>, known as the '''principal term of the equation of the center''', has a coefficient of 22639.55",<ref>(E W Brown, 1919.)</ref> approximately 0.1098 [[radian]]s, or 6.289° ([[degree (angle)|degrees]]).
 
The earliest known estimates of a parameter corresponding to the Moon's equation of the center are [[Hipparchus]]' estimates, based on a theory in which the Moon's orbit followed an [[epicycle]] or eccenter carried around a circular [[deferent]].  (The parameter in the Hipparchan theory corresponding to the equation of the center was the radius of the epicycle as a proportion of the radius of the main orbital circle.)  Hipparchus' estimates, based on his data as corrected by [[Ptolemy]] yield a figure close to 5° (degrees).<ref name=ON1975>(Neugebauer, 1975.)</ref> 
 
Most of the discrepancy between the Hipparchan estimates and the modern value of the equation of the center arises because Hipparchus' data were taken from positions of the Moon at times of eclipses.<ref name=ON1975 />  He did not recognize the perturbation now called the [[evection]]. At new and full moons the evection opposes the equation of the center, to the extent of the coefficient of the evection, 4586.45". The Hipparchus parameter for the relative size of the Moon's epicycle corresponds quite closely to the difference between the two modern coefficients, of the equation of the center, and of the evection (difference 18053.1", about 5.01°).
 
==References==
<references/>
 
===Bibliography===
*[[Ernest William Brown|Brown, E.W.]] ''An Introductory Treatise on the Lunar Theory.'' Cambridge University Press, 1896 (republished by Dover, 1960).
*Brown, E.W. ''Tables of the Motion of the Moon.'' Yale University Press, New Haven CT, 1919.
*O Neugebauer, ''A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy'' (Springer, 1975), vol.1, pp.&nbsp;315–319.
 
===Notes===
{{reflist}}
*{{1911}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Equation Of The Center}}
[[Category:Orbits]]

Revision as of 10:43, 1 March 2014

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