Testing for gravitationally preferred directions using the lunar orbit.

As gravity is a long-range force, it is a priori conceivable that the Universe’s global matter distribution selects a preferred rest frame for local gravitational physics. At the post-Newtonian approximation, the phenomenology of preferred-frame effects is described by two parameters a 1 and a 2 , the second of which is already very tightly constrained. Confirming previous suggestions, we show through a detailed Hill-Browntype calculation of a perturbed lunar orbit that lunar laser ranging data have the potential of constraining a 1 at the 10 24 level. It is found that certain retrograde planar orbits exhibit a resonant sensitivity to external perturbations linked to a fixed direction in space. The lunar orbit being quite far from such a resonance exhibits no significant enhancement due to solar tides. Our Hill-Brown analysis is extended to the perturbation linked to a possible differential acceleration toward the galactic center. It is, however, argued that there are strong a priori theoretical constraints on the conceivable magnitude of such an effect. @S0556-2821~96!05912-7#