Planetary Orbit Help??

General discussion about Celestia that doesn't fit into other forums.
Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Planetary Orbit Help??

Post #1by Mondas » 01.02.2008, 17:42

I an am newbie and this is my first post. I am trying to create an extra planet for the sol system. I got the planet set up ok. But I want to change the orbit so it comes into the system orbits the sun but instead as it passes the sun it will go through the astroid belt and back out into space. Its the planet Nibiru with a 3600 year orbit . I don't know how to upload an image so here is a link to the image. Any help would be hot.

http://www.sitchin.com/imagesB/nibiru2.jpg

:D
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Avatar
Hungry4info
Posts: 1133
Joined: 11.09.2005
With us: 19 years 2 months
Location: Indiana, United States

Post #2by Hungry4info » 02.02.2008, 00:32

What you should do is change the eccentricity. The eccentricity is how un-circular the orbit is. 0 is perfect circle, 0.9999... is very elongated. It must be from 0, and less than 1, or in interval notation, [0,1).

I would suggest changing the eccentricity, and playing with it until it is how you want it.
Current Setup:
Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics

Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #3by Mondas » 02.02.2008, 00:34

I will give that a try and see if that works
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Avatar
selden
Developer
Posts: 10192
Joined: 04.09.2002
With us: 22 years 2 months
Location: NY, USA

Post #4by selden » 02.02.2008, 02:13

Apparently Damon Elkins has already created an SSC for the hypothetical planet Nabiru which matches its supposed orbital parameters quite well. You might want to contact him to get a copy.

http://www.damonelkins.com/blog/?p=6#comments
Selden

Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #5by Mondas » 02.02.2008, 14:51

The eccentricity didn't help. it changed it from an eliptic to circular orbit.
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Avatar
selden
Developer
Posts: 10192
Joined: 04.09.2002
With us: 22 years 2 months
Location: NY, USA

Post #6by selden » 02.02.2008, 16:27

Mondas,

Exactly what is in your SSC file?

Eccentricity 0
is a circle.
Typing something Celestia doesn't recognize might also cause it to draw a circle.

You need to specify something like

Code: Select all

"Nibiru" "Sol"
{
Radius 8500
Texture "Nibiru.*"

EllipticalOrbit
  {
   Period 3600
   SemiMajorAxis 240
   Eccentricity 0.999
   Inclination -150
   AscendingNode 200
   ArgOfPericenter 300
   MeanAnomaly 0
   Epoch "2012 12 21"
  }
}


I'll leave it to you to set the parameters to more appropriate values.
Selden

Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #7by Mondas » 02.02.2008, 22:39

Thanks a bunch. Damon got it working. :D I am just trying to figure out how to change the position of the planet to get it closer to the sun. Do you know how to do that?
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #8by Mondas » 03.02.2008, 13:30

I am still trying to figure out how to change the position of the planet to get it closer to the sun with no luck yet. But I have another question? I like clicking the option to show the planetary orbits but when I did that Ploto's orbit isn't highlighted. I can't seem to figure that one out either. Anyone know about these two things? :D
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Damon
Posts: 7
Joined: 03.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #9by Damon » 03.02.2008, 14:39

Mondas, if you select Pluto as the object through the "navigation" tab, then select "goto", it will highlight Pluto's orbit.

To bring Nibiru close to the Sun, you can fast forward in time by clicking the "L" key several times. Then, as Nibiru passes halfway to the Sun, it will speed up, so you'll want to click the "K" key to slow it down as it reaches the asteroid belt and around perihelion.

Hope this helps.

Damon

Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #10by Mondas » 03.02.2008, 14:54

I don't think I explained it clear enough. When I start the program I can see a blue line for the orbits of each planet mercury out to neptune. Even Nibiru that was added has this blue line. but it bypasses pluto. Pluto's blue line doesn't even show up. As Far as changing the position. I didn't mean to speed it up. I want to follow current theories and place it closer to the system in real time. Supposedly next year it will enter the system but it can't as far out as it is. I want to move it closer without speeding the program up.
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Damon
Posts: 7
Joined: 03.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #11by Damon » 03.02.2008, 17:40

I still have blue orbit rings for all planets including Pluto. Someone else might help you more on that.

As for Nibiru...
You can change the position by changing the Mean Anomaly to 359.2 to bring Nibiru just short of the asteroid belt "under" the ecliptic on its inbound portion of orbit.
IMHO, current theories which place Nibiru that close are wrong for the simple reason that it would now be readily observable.

Topic author
Mondas
Posts: 7
Joined: 01.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #12by Mondas » 03.02.2008, 18:31

Thanks.. I will try the mean... As for the theory... I don't think its that close either. But its fun to play around with it. :D
I Don't Think You're Happy Enough

Avatar
Hungry4info
Posts: 1133
Joined: 11.09.2005
With us: 19 years 2 months
Location: Indiana, United States

Post #13by Hungry4info » 03.02.2008, 21:58

In the default version of Celestia, Pluto doesn't... and shouldn't have a blue line. Blue lines are for planets. Pluto is not a planet.
Current Setup:
Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics

Damon
Posts: 7
Joined: 03.02.2008
With us: 16 years 9 months

Post #14by Damon » 03.02.2008, 22:55

I'm still using Celestia version 1.4.1 which has default with Pluto still a planet.
It was downgraded latter part of 2006 after the time of that version.
Wasn't aware that it'd been changed in later version(s).
Thanks for update.

Avatar
selden
Developer
Posts: 10192
Joined: 04.09.2002
With us: 22 years 2 months
Location: NY, USA

Post #15by selden » 03.02.2008, 23:24

Hungry,

Celestia v1.5.0 doesn't show an orbital path for Pluto (actually for the Pluto-Charon Barycenter) because of a defect in Celestia, not because Pluto is no longer a planet. Celestia does not yet draw the orbits of the new ReferencePoint objects.

Celestia has not yet caught up with the IAU's planetary specifications. For example, if you type a 9, which selects the 9th planet of the currently selected Star, the Pluto-Charon barycenter will be selected.

It is to be hoped that a future version of Celestia (perhaps even v1.5.1) will allow selection of dwarf planets, and the drawing of orbit paths for ReferencePoints.
Selden


Return to “Celestia Users”