Gravity Probe B

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Gravity Probe B
Mission Profile
AgencyNASA / Stanford University
Mission TypeFundamental physics experiment
Launch DateApril 20, 2004
Launch VehicleDelta II 7920-10
Orbit642 km polar, 97.65 min period
Mission Duration17.3 months (science phase)
PIC. W. Francis Everitt (Stanford)
Results
Geodetic Precession6,601.8 ± 18.3 mas/yr (predicted: 6,606.1)
Frame-Dragging37.2 ± 7.2 mas/yr (predicted: 39.2)
Geodetic Accuracy0.28%
Frame-Dragging Accuracy19%
Experimental confirmation of Gravitoelectromagnetism
⚡️ Electrogravitics - Electrogravitic Tech Electrokinetics - Electrokinetic Tech
🧲 Magnetogravitics - Magnetogravitic Tech Magnetokinetics - Magnetokinetic Tech

Gravity Probe B (GP-B) was a NASA/Stanford University space experiment that provided the first direct measurement of gravitomagnetic frame-dragging — the twisting of spacetime by Earth's rotation predicted by the Lense-Thirring effect in general relativity. Launched in 2004, the mission confirmed the gravitoelectromagnetic (GEM) framework to high precision and established the experimental reality of gravitomagnetism.

For the Magneto Speeder program, GP-B is the critical proof point: gravitomagnetic fields are real, measurable, and behave as predicted by the GEM equations. The engineering challenge is amplification, not existence.

Mission Concept

The experiment was conceptually simple but technically extreme: place four ultra-precise gyroscopes in polar orbit and measure their precession axes over one year. General relativity predicts two precession effects:

Geodetic (de Sitter) Precession

The curvature of spacetime caused by Earth's mass causes a gyroscope's spin axis to precess in the orbital plane:

Predicted value at 642 km altitude: 6,606.1 milliarcseconds per year (mas/yr).

This is conceptually analogous to parallel transport on a curved surface — a vector carried around a closed loop on a sphere rotates.

Gravitomagnetic (Lense-Thirring) Precession

The rotation of Earth "drags" spacetime around with it, causing a gyroscope to precess perpendicular to the orbital plane: [1]

Predicted value: 39.2 mas/yr.

This is the GEM effect — Earth's angular momentum creates a gravitomagnetic field (see Gravitoelectromagnetism).

Technical Specifications

GP-B Instrument Performance
Component Specification Significance
Gyroscope rotors 38 mm fused quartz spheres Roundest objects ever made: < 40 nm departures (< 0.3 µm peak-to-valley)
Gyroscope coating 1.27 µm niobium thin film Superconducting at 6.5 K → London moment readout
Spin rate ~80 Hz (4,800 RPM) Provides angular momentum stability
Readout mechanism London moment SQUID Spinning superconductor generates → SQUID detects axis direction
Spin-axis drift target < 0.5 mas/yr Required to resolve 39 mas/yr frame-dragging
Guide star IM Pegasi (HR 8703) Proper motion calibrated using VLBI (radio astrometry)
Dewar 2,441 L superfluid helium 16-month lifetime at 1.8 K
Telescope 14-inch Cassegrain Locked to guide star to < 1 mas pointing
Drag-free satellite Proportional helium thrusters Satellite follows gyroscope, eliminating atmospheric drag

The London Moment Readout

This is directly relevant to gravitomagnetic physics. A spinning superconducting sphere generates a magnetic field (the London moment): [2]

The field is aligned with the spin axis. Ultra-sensitive SQUIDs (superconducting quantum interference devices) measure the orientation of this field to track the gyroscope's spin axis direction as it precesses. GP-B measured the London moment to calibrate the readout, using the known value for the electron mass-to-charge ratio.

Importantly, the Tate Experiment (1989–1990) measured an anomalous London moment in niobium — the Cooper pair mass was 84 ppm higher than expected — which Ning Li interpreted as evidence for gravitomagnetic coupling.

Results

Data Analysis Challenges

The experiment faced serious systematic problems:

GP-B Systematic Effects
Effect Magnitude Resolution
Electrostatic patch effect ~100 mas/yr (enormous!) Microscopic patches of varying surface potential created torques on rotors
Polhode motion 1–100 hour variations Rotor non-sphericity caused nutational oscillations superimposed on signal
Guide star proper motion ~28 mas/yr Calibrated using VLBI radio astrometry (Shapiro et al.)
Solar radiation pressure Continuous Drag-free control compensated
Magnetic trapped flux Small but variable Superconducting shield + calibration

The electrostatic patch effect was the primary challenge. It produced torques ~100× larger than the frame-dragging signal. The Stanford team developed a post-hoc model over 2005–2011 to subtract this systematic, which was controversial.

Final Results (2011)

[3]

GP-B Final Results
Effect GR Prediction (mas/yr) Measured (mas/yr) Accuracy
Geodetic precession 6,606.1 6,601.8 ± 18.3 0.28% (north-south, in orbital plane)
Frame-dragging 39.2 37.2 ± 7.2 19% (east-west, perpendicular to orbital plane)

The geodetic result is among the most precise tests of general relativity ever performed. The frame-dragging result, while less precise, constituted the first direct detection of gravitomagnetism from a dedicated experiment.

Significance for Magnetogravitic Technology

What GP-B Proved

  1. Gravitomagnetic fields exist and are produced by rotating mass exactly as GEM predicts
  2. The GEM equations are correct — the frame-dragging precession matches
  3. SQUID-based gravitomagnetic detection works — the London moment readout scheme is viable

What GP-B Did NOT Prove

  1. It did not test whether gravitomagnetism can be amplified by superconductors (the Ning Li / Tajmar claim)
  2. It did not test whether gravitomagnetic fields can produce thrust (the Magneto Speeder application)
  3. It did not test Kaluza-Klein or higher-dimensional effects

The Engineering Gap

GP-B measured Earth's gravitomagnetic field: rad/s. The Magneto Speeder needs rad/s for useful propulsion. That's a 13-order-of-magnitude gap between confirmed physics and vehicle engineering requirements. The theoretical amplification pathways (Gravitomagnetic London Moment, Heim Theory) aim to bridge this gap.

Related Experiments

Gravitomagnetic Measurement Programs
Experiment Method Accuracy Year Status
LAGEOS I & II Satellite laser ranging ~20% 1996–2004 Complete
Gravity Probe B Orbiting gyroscopes 0.28% (geo), 19% (LT) 2004–2011 Complete — definitive
LARES Satellite laser ranging ~5% target 2012– Active
LARES-2 Satellite laser ranging ~1% target 2022– Active
GINGER Ground ring laser array Dedicated LT measurement Proposed Development

See Also

References

  1. Lense, J. & Thirring, H. (1918). "Über den Einfluß der Eigenrotation der Zentralkörper auf die Bewegung der Planeten und Monde nach der Einsteinschen Gravitationstheorie." Physikalische Zeitschrift 19, 156–163.
  2. London, F. (1950). Superfluids, Vol. 1. Wiley, New York.
  3. Everitt, C.W.F. et al. (2011). "Gravity Probe B: Final Results of a Space Experiment to Test General Relativity." Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 221101. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.221101