new moon orbits Pluto
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Topic authorkristoffer
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new moon orbits Pluto
It is been found a new moon around Pluto
http://www.space.com/12356-pluto-fourth ... photo.html
http://www.space.com/12356-pluto-fourth ... photo.html
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Exciting!
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Here's an add-on.
The elements come from the Horizons system.
The elements come from the Horizons system.
Code: Select all
"Pluto IV" "Sol/Pluto"
{
Class "moon"
Texture "asteroid.jpg" # "spectrally neutral"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 17
Albedo 0.18
OrbitFrame { EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto_bary"}}
EllipticalOrbit {
Epoch 2457217.500000000 # A.D. 2015-Jul-14 00:00:00.000
Eccentricity 0.44094759511847 # Eccentricity
Inclination 179.93189906228 # Inclination (degrees)
SemiMajorAxis 103412.98367567 # Semi-major Axis (AU)
ArgOfPericenter 107.30665208468 # Argument of Pericenter (degrees)
AscendingNode 277.13609331269 # Ascending Node (degrees)
MeanAnomaly 6.3491343277713 # Mean Anomaly (Position of body at epoch, degrees from pericenter angle)
Period 81.842389838233 # Period in earth days
}
}
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- Marco Klunder
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
CAP-Team wrote:Here's an add-on.
Indeed an exiting discovery... and thanks for the add-on... but...
I must say, isn't the upcoming Hydra-P4 encounter (using this add-on) on 18 Sep 2011 a bit too close
Only 7782,6 km
And on 7 Dec 2011 only 1776,2 km
The add-on also suggest a retrograde motion of P4, instead of the NASA picture below:
The add-on also shows P4 in the neighbourhood of Hydra on 28-Jun and 3-Jul, while the Hubble Telescopy image says it's in the neighbourhood of Nix!
But looking closer at the Celestia representation of the Complete Pluto System, that might not be a specific Add-on issue but a Celestia (minormoon) implementation bug..., because I cannot reproduce a Hubble like picture at all during these 2 dates:
PS. Suggest to change class as "minormoon" instead of "moon" in the Add-on.
Marco
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Orbit looks wrong to me.
Running the Horizons for P4 w.r.t the Pluto system barycentre, I get an eccentricity of about 0.02, rather than the high-eccentricity orbit you've got here.
Running the Horizons for P4 w.r.t the Pluto system barycentre, I get an eccentricity of about 0.02, rather than the high-eccentricity orbit you've got here.
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
My parameters in the Horizons system were wrong.
Here are the updated elements, for epoche 2011-06-28
I can now reproduce Hubble's image:
Here are the updated elements, for epoche 2011-06-28
Code: Select all
EllipticalOrbit {
Epoch 2455740.500000000 # A.D. 2011-Jun-28 00:00:00.000
Eccentricity 0.019157172981776 # Eccentricity
Inclination 112.80279383693 # Inclination (degrees)
SemiMajorAxis 56247.755167425 # Semi-major Axis (km)
ArgOfPericenter 257.2177965294 # Argument of Pericenter (degrees)
AscendingNode 227.42287453946 # Ascending Node (degrees)
MeanAnomaly 180 # Mean Anomaly (Position of body at epoch, degrees from pericenter angle)
Period 30.96395634409 # Period in earth days
}
I can now reproduce Hubble's image:
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- Marco Klunder
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Hello,
Implementing the new parameters by CAP-team indeed gives a better picture, however I also needed to change:
to
to prevent the orbit of P4 being drawn with a big angle relative to the other orbits and not being labled.
Here's my result with the changed code above, according to the Hydra and Nix definitions in numberedmoons.ssc:
So the orbits are looking good, as well as the position of Charon an P4 compared to the Hubble image and compared to the image by CAP-team.
The positions of Nix and Hydra however do certainly not match.
Knowing this has nothing to do with the P4 add-on, but what's going wrong here
Nix and Hydra in CAP-teams picture are drawn at other postitions, indeed corresponding to the Hubble image, but not on my system...
Im using the default settings for these minor moons (numberedmoons.ssc) and tested with v1.6.1 and SVN....
Marco
Implementing the new parameters by CAP-team indeed gives a better picture, however I also needed to change:
Code: Select all
OrbitFrame { EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto_bary"}}
to
Code: Select all
OrbitFrame { EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto-Charon"}}
to prevent the orbit of P4 being drawn with a big angle relative to the other orbits and not being labled.
Here's my result with the changed code above, according to the Hydra and Nix definitions in numberedmoons.ssc:
So the orbits are looking good, as well as the position of Charon an P4 compared to the Hubble image and compared to the image by CAP-team.
The positions of Nix and Hydra however do certainly not match.
Knowing this has nothing to do with the P4 add-on, but what's going wrong here
Nix and Hydra in CAP-teams picture are drawn at other postitions, indeed corresponding to the Hubble image, but not on my system...
Im using the default settings for these minor moons (numberedmoons.ssc) and tested with v1.6.1 and SVN....
Marco
Marco Klunder
email: marco.klunder@xs4all.nl
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email: marco.klunder@xs4all.nl
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Celestia161 / SVN + Lua Edu Tools v1.2 Beta9, Celestia160-ED and Celestia1621
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Marco, that's why I'm using spice kernels for most moons and all planets.
This way, you get the most accurate positions possible.
Downside is that Celestia won't run as smooth as with calculated or VSOP orbits.
This way, you get the most accurate positions possible.
Downside is that Celestia won't run as smooth as with calculated or VSOP orbits.
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
JPL has already got a SPICE kernel with the orbit of P4:
ftp://naif.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/naif/generi ... atellites/
The relevant file is plu020.bsp and it covers the orbit of P4 from 2005 through the beginning of 2016.
--Chris
ftp://naif.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/naif/generi ... atellites/
The relevant file is plu020.bsp and it covers the orbit of P4 from 2005 through the beginning of 2016.
--Chris
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
--- edit ---
Last edited by John Van Vliet on 19.10.2013, 07:16, edited 1 time in total.
Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Ephemeris Type [change] : ELEMENTS
Target Body [change] : [904]
Center [change] : Pluto (body center) [500@999]
Time Span [change] : Start=2011-08-04, Stop=2011-08-14, Step=1 d
Table Settings [change] : output units=KM-D
Display/Output [change] : default (formatted HTML)
Ephemeris Type [change] : VECTORS
Target Body [change] : [904]
Coordinate Origin [change] : Pluto System Barycenter [500@9]
Time Span [change] : Start=2011-08-04, Stop=2011-10-03, Step=1 h
Table Settings [change] : output units=KM-S; quantities code=2; CSV format=YES; object page=NO
Display/Output [change] : default (formatted HTML)
Target Body [change] : [904]
Center [change] : Pluto (body center) [500@999]
Time Span [change] : Start=2011-08-04, Stop=2011-08-14, Step=1 d
Table Settings [change] : output units=KM-D
Display/Output [change] : default (formatted HTML)
Code: Select all
Revised: Jul 21, 2011 S/2011 (134340) 1 / Pluto 904
Fit to all available observations of newly discovered satellite of Pluto
reported in CBAT 2769 (Jul 20, 2011).
Diameter depends on the assumed geometric albedo:
14 km if p_v = 0.35, or 40 km if p_v = 0.04.
Motion is consistent with a body traveling on a circular, equatorial orbit.
Inferred mean motion is 11.2 +/- 0.1 degrees per day (P = 32.1 +/- 0.3 days),
and the projected radial distance from Pluto is 59000 +/- 2000 km, placing
the satellite between the orbits of Pluto II (Nix) and III (Hydra).
Prediscovery measurements provide a data arc spanning 2006-2011.
Ephemeris Type [change] : VECTORS
Target Body [change] : [904]
Coordinate Origin [change] : Pluto System Barycenter [500@9]
Time Span [change] : Start=2011-08-04, Stop=2011-10-03, Step=1 h
Table Settings [change] : output units=KM-S; quantities code=2; CSV format=YES; object page=NO
Display/Output [change] : default (formatted HTML)
Code: Select all
"P4:pluto 4" "Sol/Pluto-Charon"
{
Class "moon"
Radius 20
BodyFrame {
EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto-Charon" }
}
OrbitFrame {
EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto-Charon" }
}
SampledTrajectory { Source "test2.xyzv" }
Albedo 0.18
}
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Ephemeris Type [change] : ELEMENTS
Target Body [change] : [904]
Center [change] : Pluto System Barycenter [500@9]
Time Span [change] : Start=2011-08-04, Stop=2011-10-03, Step=1 h
Table Settings [change] : output units=KM-D
Display/Output [change] : default (formatted HTML)
Target Body [change] : [904]
Center [change] : Pluto System Barycenter [500@9]
Time Span [change] : Start=2011-08-04, Stop=2011-10-03, Step=1 h
Table Settings [change] : output units=KM-D
Display/Output [change] : default (formatted HTML)
Code: Select all
"Pluto IV" "Sol/Pluto-Charon"
{
Class "moon"
Texture "asteroid.jpg" # "spectrally neutral"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 20
Albedo 0.18
BodyFrame {
EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto-Charon" }
}
OrbitFrame {
EclipticJ2000 { Center "Sol/Pluto-Charon" }
}
EllipticalOrbit {
Epoch 2455777.500000000 # A.D. 2011-Aug-04 00:00:00.0000 (CT)
Eccentricity 0.001915717298180381 # Eccentricity
Inclination 112.8027938369342 # Inclination (degrees)
SemiMajorAxis 56247.75516742301 # Semi-major Axis (KM)
ArgOfPericenter 311.2992131029849 # Argument of Pericenter (degrees)
AscendingNode 227.4228745394583 # Ascending Node (degrees)
MeanAnomaly 180.0000000000114 # Mean Anomaly (Position of body at epoch, degrees from pericenter angle)
Period 30.96395634408879 # Period in earth days
}
}
windows 10 directX 12 version
celestia 1.7.0 64 bits
with a general handicap of 80% and it makes much d' efforts for the community and s' expimer, thank you d' to be understanding.
celestia 1.7.0 64 bits
with a general handicap of 80% and it makes much d' efforts for the community and s' expimer, thank you d' to be understanding.
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
--- edit ---
Last edited by John Van Vliet on 19.10.2013, 07:14, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
I don't think that this is correct: P4 should be in the same plane as the other satellites. In your image, the angle between the orbital planes of P4 and the other satellites looks suspiciously close to 23 degrees, which suggests a mixup of equatorial and ecliptic frames.
--Chris
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
--- edit ---
Last edited by John Van Vliet on 19.10.2013, 07:14, edited 1 time in total.
Re: new moon orbits Pluto
All this fuss, and Pluto still isn't considered a "proper" planet?
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
A planet must:
1) Orbit a star.
2) Have sufficient mass to achieve hydrostatic equilibrium.
3) Gravitationally dominate the neighbourhood around its orbit.
The number of moons is irrelevant. You may as well ask why the sun isn't considered a planet based on the criteria of number of orbiting bodies.
1) Orbit a star.
2) Have sufficient mass to achieve hydrostatic equilibrium.
3) Gravitationally dominate the neighbourhood around its orbit.
The number of moons is irrelevant. You may as well ask why the sun isn't considered a planet based on the criteria of number of orbiting bodies.
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
Guys, let's not start a flame war. We all know it's a planet anyway. Anyway, about the moon, I already have a mesh in the works. Of course it's fictional, we know next to nothing about P4's shape (or that of Nix or Hydra, for that matter).
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Re: new moon orbits Pluto
--- edit ---
Last edited by John Van Vliet on 19.10.2013, 07:11, edited 1 time in total.
Re: new moon orbits Pluto
John,
what about giving the model itself here, so we can try it ? (high res, please).
EDIT : According to your YouTube video, there's a nasty line visible on the model, and even a hole on a pole ?
what about giving the model itself here, so we can try it ? (high res, please).
EDIT : According to your YouTube video, there's a nasty line visible on the model, and even a hole on a pole ?
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