A Dynamical Investigation of the Conjecture that Mercury is an Escaped Satellite of Venus
Abstract
The possibility that Mercury might once have been satellite of a Venus, suggested by a number of anomalies, is investigated by a series of numerical computer experiments. Tidal interaction between Mercury and Venus would result in the escape of Mercury into a solar orbit. Only two escape orbits are possible, one exterior and one interior to the Venus orbit. For the interior orbit, subsequent encounters are sufficiently distant to avoid recapture or large perturbations. The perihelion distance of Mercury tends to decrease, while the orientation of perihelion librates for the first few thousand revolutions. If dynamical evolution or nonconservative forces were large enough in the early solar system, the present semimajor axes could have resulted. The theoretical minimum quadrupole moment of the inclined rotating Sun would rotate the orbital planes out of coplanarity. Secular perturbations by the other planets would evolve the eccentricity and inclination of Mercury's orbit through a range of possible configurations, including the present orbit. Thus the conjecture that Mercury is an escaped satellite of Venus remains viable, and is rendered more attractive by our failure to disprove it dynamically.
- Publication:
-
Icarus
- Pub Date:
- August 1976
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0019-1035(76)90116-0
- Bibcode:
- 1976Icar...28..435V
- Keywords:
-
- Mercury (Planet);
- Natural Satellites;
- Orbit Calculation;
- Planetary Evolution;
- Satellite Orbits;
- Venus (Planet);
- Eccentric Orbits;
- Hypotheses;
- Planetary Rotation;
- Planetology;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration