Project "Celestia Origin", release dated April 30, 2021
- SpaceFanatic64
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Topic authorArt Blos
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Much more accurate. No more "collisions" between spacecraft and celestial bodies.SpaceFanatic64 wrote:I assume that the addition of XYZV trajectories is to make the orbits of planets and moons more accurate, is that correct?
If everything is done correctly, the errors do not exceed several tens of kilometers.
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- SpaceFanatic64
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There are a few things that I've been wondering about in terms of their inclusion, such as Elektra's third satellite and the many new names of moons of Jupiter and Saturn.
Edit: Nevermind, it looks like Elektra's third moon has already been added, but I know that a few months ago some Jovian and Saturnian moons received names.
Edit: Nevermind, it looks like Elektra's third moon has already been added, but I know that a few months ago some Jovian and Saturnian moons received names.
If you see that I made a dumb or nonsensical post years ago, please forgive me in advance.
- SpaceFanatic64
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Topic authorArt Blos
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I need specific examples to check.SpaceFanatic64 wrote:There were some new names on Wikipedia that I hadn't noticed in the current version, but maybe they've been added already.
We can only update physical and orbital parameters. Haven't seen any official models from NASA.SpaceFanatic64 wrote:I do at least hope though that Didymos and Dimorphos will be updated.
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- SpaceFanatic64
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Here are the missing names for Saturn's moons that weren't in the current update:
Gridr (Saturn LIV/S/2004 S 20)
Eggther (Saturn LIX/S/2004 S 27)
Angrboda (Saturn LV/S/2004 S 22)
Beli (Saturn LXI/S/2004 S 30)
Gerd (Saturn LVII/S/2004 S 25)
Gunnlod (Saturn LXII/S/2004 S 32)
Skrymir (Saturn LVI/S/2004 S 23)
Alvaldi (Saturn LXV/S/2004 S 35)
Geirrod (Saturn LXVI/S/2004 S 38)
Thiazzi (Saturn LXIII/S/2004 S 33)
(EDIT: Disregard the top; they have already been added, but the bottom still applies).
A few other unnamed moons have also received labels.
S/2004 S 29 = Saturn LX
S/2004 S 34 = Saturn LXIV
S/2004 S 26 = Saturn LVIII
The Jovian moons are still up-to-date so no changes need to be made to it.
Gridr (Saturn LIV/S/2004 S 20)
Eggther (Saturn LIX/S/2004 S 27)
Angrboda (Saturn LV/S/2004 S 22)
Beli (Saturn LXI/S/2004 S 30)
Gerd (Saturn LVII/S/2004 S 25)
Gunnlod (Saturn LXII/S/2004 S 32)
Skrymir (Saturn LVI/S/2004 S 23)
Alvaldi (Saturn LXV/S/2004 S 35)
Geirrod (Saturn LXVI/S/2004 S 38)
Thiazzi (Saturn LXIII/S/2004 S 33)
(EDIT: Disregard the top; they have already been added, but the bottom still applies).
A few other unnamed moons have also received labels.
S/2004 S 29 = Saturn LX
S/2004 S 34 = Saturn LXIV
S/2004 S 26 = Saturn LVIII
The Jovian moons are still up-to-date so no changes need to be made to it.
If you see that I made a dumb or nonsensical post years ago, please forgive me in advance.
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Topic authorArt Blos
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All new numbers also have been assigned. We just didn't announce it separately.SpaceFanatic64 wrote:A few other unnamed moons have also received labels.
Okay, but I'm not ruling out that by the time we get to that, something may have changed.SpaceFanatic64 wrote:The Jovian moons are still up-to-date so no changes need to be made to it.
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Why hundrets of .xyzv files instead of some SPICE (.bsp) kernels (can also be generated with Horizons)?
.bsp files are more accurate than .xyzv files.
.bsp files are more accurate than .xyzv files.
Crew: "We are orbiting a black hole."
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
Why all .xyzv trajectory data from 1957 Oct 04 to 2099 Nov 18, not from e.g. 1900 Jan 01 to 2100 Jan 01?
On 1957 Oct 04 Sputnik 1 launched, but what will launch/happen on 2099 Nov 18?
On 1957 Oct 04 Sputnik 1 launched, but what will launch/happen on 2099 Nov 18?
Crew: "We are orbiting a black hole."
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
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Topic authorArt Blos
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Exactly. We got into all this to eliminate all errors with the spacecraft flybys. That is why trajectories have been working since the beginning of the Space Age. Before it occurs errors are not so noticeable.EarthMoon wrote:On 1957 Oct 04 Sputnik 1 launched
2099 Nov 28. On this day closes the last orbit until 2100 year for Iapetus - the outermost synchronized moon in the Solar System. To simplify the work, we took the resulting template and began to apply it to all inner moons. The secret is extremely simple.EarthMoon wrote:but what will launch/happen on 2099 Nov 18?
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