| Body | μ
|
| - | [km3s-2]
|
| Sun | 132,712,440,000
|
| Mercury | 22,032
|
| Venus | 324,859
|
| Earth | 398,600
|
| Mars | 42,828
|
| Jupiter | 126,686,534
|
| Saturn | 37,931,187
|
| Uranus | 5,793,947
|
| Neptune | 6,836,529
|
| Pluto | 1,001
|
In astrodynamics, the standard gravitational parameter (
) of a celestial body is the product of the gravitational constant (
) and the mass
:
The units of the standard gravitational parameter are km3s-2
Small body orbiting a central body
Under standard assumptions in astrodynamics we have:
where:
and the relevant standard gravitational parameter is that of the larger body.
For all circular orbits around a given central body:
where:
The last equality has a very simple generalization to elliptic orbits:
where:
For all parabolic trajectories rv² is constant and equal to 2μ.
For elliptic and hyperbolic orbits μ is twice the semi-major axis times the absolute value of the specific orbital energy.
Two bodies orbiting each other
In the more general case where the bodies need not be a large one and a small one, we define:
- the vector r is the position of one body relative to the other
- r, v, and in the case of an elliptic orbit, the semi-major axis a, are defined accordingly (hence r is the distance)
(the sum of the two μ-values)
where:
and
are the masses of the two bodies.
Then:
Terminology and accuracy
The value for the Earth is called geocentric gravitational constant and equal to 398,600.441,8 ± 0.000,8 km3s-2. Thus the uncertainty is 1 to 500 000 000, much smaller than the uncertainties in G and M separately (1 to 7000 each).
The value for the Sun is called heliocentric gravitational constant.