Abstract

This paper revisits deviations from Newtonian gravity described by a Yukawa interaction that can arise from the existence of a finite range fifth force. We show that the standard multipolar expansion of the Earth gravitational potential can be generalised. In particular, the multipolar coefficients depend on the distance to the centre of the Earth and are therefore not universal to the Earth system anymore. This offers new ways of constraining such Yukawa interactions and demonstrates explicitly the limits of the Newton-based interpretation of geodesy experiments. In turn, limitations from geodesy data restrict the possibility of testing gravity in space. The gravitational acceleration is described in terms of spin-weighted spherical harmonics allowing us to obtain the perturbing force entering the Lagrange–Gauss secular equations. This is then used to discuss the correlation between geodesy and modified gravity experiments and the possibility to break their degeneracy. Finally we show that, given the existing constraints, a Yukawa fifth force is expected to be sub-dominant in satellite dynamics and space geodesy experiments, as long as they are performed at altitudes greater than a few hundred kilometres. Gravity surveys will have to gain at least two orders of magnitude in instrumental precision before satellite geodesy could be used to improve the current constraints on modified gravity.

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