Ok, i?m trying to place a satellite on a fixed position above a planet.
Since i?m still on 1.3.1, i am using Grant?s invisible placeholder trick. But i have run into problems:
The planet?s rotationperiod : 9.83 hours
gives the satellite?s placeholder (the invisible) a period of: 0.4095833 days.
... This makes it stand still, as long as the orbit is equatorial.
However, i need to give the invisible an inclination of 60 degrees to get it to the point where the satellite must go. But with an inclination, it does not stand still relative to the surface anymore...
So, what am i missing here? Why does it move? And what value do i insert / change to compensate for the movement caused by the inclination value?
Any help is greatly appreciated, and the result will help realize a novel (never before seen) Add-On-concept to be included in the coming Ran Update...
- rthorvald
Positioning satellites
-
- Posts: 164
- Joined: 18.03.2004
- Age: 63
- With us: 20 years 8 months
- Location: Victoria, BC Canada
Re: Positioning satellites
...rthorvald wrote:Ok, i?m trying to place a satellite on a fixed position above a planet.
rthorvald wrote:However, i need to give the invisible an inclination of 60 degrees to get it to the point where the satellite must go. But with an inclination, it does not stand still relative to the surface anymore
Okay, this may be a bit off topic, but, without spoiling your surprise, can you tell me how a satellite can be geosynchronous but not be in an equatorial orbit?
rthorvald wrote:Ok, i?m trying to place a satellite on a fixed position above a planet.
Since i?m still on 1.3.1, i am using Grant?s invisible placeholder trick. But i have run into problems:
Oh, and perhaps this could help you. (Without really knowing how to do it myself) would it meet your needs to position the placeholder centred on the planet's pole of rototation, but centred above or below the equator at the desired latitude. The satellite could then orbit the placeholder in an equatorial orbit which would keep it above the same point on the planet. I am just not sure how you would get the placeholder to sit at the required location - can you make a geosynchronous orbit that is on the rotational axis?
Clive Pottinger
Victoria, BC Canada
Victoria, BC Canada
-
- Developer
- Posts: 1863
- Joined: 21.11.2002
- With us: 22 years
I'm not sure how you're using my placeholder, here ... the position of the satellite should be adjusted by moving the placeholder north or south along the planet's axis and recalculating the required orbital radius of the satellite (not by tilting the placeholder orbit).
As a concrete example, here's an annotated way of placing Galileo permanently 700km above 60N, 30W on the Earth:Most imaginary planets don't need a RotationOffset, so if this is undefined just set it to zero in the calculations above.
Does this help you see what's going on?
Grant
As a concrete example, here's an annotated way of placing Galileo permanently 700km above 60N, 30W on the Earth:
Code: Select all
# To place a "satellite" 700km above a planet at 60N 30W
# Desired radius = radius of planet + desired altitude
# in this case, 7078 (Earth radius +700 km)
"#" "Sol/Earth" # A dummy body to provide a suitable orbit centre
{
Class "invisible"
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 1e12 # - NEVER CHANGE THIS VALUE
SemiMajorAxis 6129.7 # Desired radius * sin(Latitude) - CALCULATE FOR YOUR PLANET
AscendingNode 280.5 # Earth's RotationOffset - USE VALUE FOR YOUR PLANET
Inclination 90 # - NEVER CHANGE THIS VALUE
MeanAnomaly 90 # - NEVER CHANGE THIS VALUE
}
}
"My satellite" "Sol/Earth/#"
{
Class "spacecraft"
Mesh "galileo.3ds"
Radius 0.020
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 0.997269558 # Earth's rotation period (days) - USE VALUE FOR YOUR PLANET
SemiMajorAxis 3539 # Desired radius * cos(Latitude) - CALCULATE FOR YOUR PLANET
# Earth's RotationOffset = +280.5 - USE VALUE FOR YOUR PLANET
MeanLongitude 250.5 # Subtract west longitude = - 30 - USE YOUR DESIRED LONGITUDE
# ======
# 250.5
}
}
Does this help you see what's going on?
Grant
Re: Positioning satellites
cpotting wrote:without spoiling your surprise, can you tell me how a satellite can be geosynchronous but not be in an equatorial orbit?
Yes... When it?s not really a satellite
thanks,
-rthorvald
granthutchison wrote:the position of the satellite should be adjusted by moving the placeholder north or south along the planet's axis and recalculating the required orbital radius of the satellite (not by tilting the placeholder orbit)
Thank you!
I misunderstood/misremembered how that worked... Your example cleared my head.
Thanks for your quick reply, too!
- rthorvald
-
- Developer
- Posts: 1863
- Joined: 21.11.2002
- With us: 22 years
Of course if you have 1.3.2 you don't need to bother with all the placeholder nonsense:
Grant
Code: Select all
"My satellite" "Sol/Earth"
{
Class "spacecraft"
Mesh "galileo.3ds"
Radius 0.020
LongLat [-30 60 700]
}
Grant