Right now the ESA is running an experiment called the Mars 500 where 6 people are sealed into a simulated manned mission to mars. I would like to track this mission with Celestia. Lucky for us, the Mission commander has a twitter account.
What kind of information do I need to display the spaceship's location? My guess is just a vector, and the gavity will do the rest. The thing is that it will take 240 days to get there, and I can't find a proper cycle that will trasfer them from Earth to Mars in that time exactly. They just undocked with the ISS, which means they probably are using some kind of propultion to get them into the right cruise attitude for mars.
What can I get from either ESA or the mission commander to track the mission on my side?
Tracking the Mars 500
- Hungry4info
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Re: Tracking the Mars 500
Are you talking about the real location of the experiment? (It's in Moscow if I recall), or a representation of it out in space on the way to Mars?
And if the later, is the mission going that in detail? I thought it was a psychological experiment alone.
And if the later, is the mission going that in detail? I thought it was a psychological experiment alone.
Current Setup:
Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics
Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics
Re: Tracking the Mars 500
No, it's a real simulation of mars with a real flight profile. I just need to know what info I need to follow the simulation in Celeatia.
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Re: Tracking the Mars 500
halkun wrote:Right now the ESA is running an experiment called the Mars 500 where 6 people are sealed into a simulated manned mission to mars. I would like to track this mission with Celestia. Lucky for us, the Mission commander has a twitter account.
What kind of information do I need to display the spaceship's location? My guess is just a vector, and the gavity will do the rest. The thing is that it will take 240 days to get there, and I can't find a proper cycle that will trasfer them from Earth to Mars in that time exactly. They just undocked with the ISS, which means they probably are using some kind of propultion to get them into the right cruise attitude for mars.
What can I get from either ESA or the mission commander to track the mission on my side?
Ideally, you want a file SPICE position kernel file (.bsp file). But, you'll probably have better luck just getting a list of the spacecraft's position and velocity at successive times in the mission.
--Chris