captured rotation and geosynchronos orbit

General discussion about Celestia that doesn't fit into other forums.
Topic author
Beeblebrox ate my hamster
Posts: 20
Joined: 04.12.2003
With us: 20 years 11 months

captured rotation and geosynchronos orbit

Post #1by Beeblebrox ate my hamster » 24.12.2003, 20:06

For example I have created a model of a gas siphoning space station to orbit a gas giant at a low altitude (marvellous view with a ringed planet!) but I want it to keep the business end of the thing pointed at the planet at all times.

Also how do you find the geosynchronos orbit for any object, am I missing something remarkably simple (too many Pan Galactic gargle blasters at Xmas time!)

granthutchison
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Posts: 1863
Joined: 21.11.2002
With us: 21 years 11 months

Re: captured rotation and geosynchronos orbit

Post #2by granthutchison » 24.12.2003, 21:00

Beeblebrox ate my hamster wrote:For example I have created a model of a gas siphoning space station to orbit a gas giant at a low altitude (marvellous view with a ringed planet!) but I want it to keep the business end of the thing pointed at the planet at all times.
If you don't specify a RotationPeriod in the ssc, Celestia will automatically maintain synchronous rotation for you. You may need to tweak the orientation of your model, however, using RotationOffset or the Orientation command, so that it's initialized with its business end pointing at the planet.

Beeblebrox ate my hamster wrote:Also how do you find the geosynchronos orbit for any object, am I missing something remarkably simple (too many Pan Galactic gargle blasters at Xmas time!)
Simple solution is to forget the physics and just set the Period of your space station's orbit equal to the RotationPeriod of the gas giant.

Complicated solution is to get the physics right, and calculate the correct SemiMajorAxis to go with the Period you've worked out above:

a^3 = G*M*P^2/(4*pi^2)

where M is the mass of your planet, P is its rotation period, a is the semimajor axis of the space station's orbit and G is the gravitational constant.

Grant

Topic author
Beeblebrox ate my hamster
Posts: 20
Joined: 04.12.2003
With us: 20 years 11 months

Post #3by Beeblebrox ate my hamster » 06.01.2004, 15:05

thanks for all that , I think I'll avoid all the maths though ! :lol:


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