Probably crash with the Earth ???
Probably crash with the Earth ???
Look here:
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005 ... 004mn4.htm
and
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news149.html
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005 ... 004mn4.htm
and
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news149.html
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Re: Probably crash with the Earth ???
Fightspit wrote:Look here:
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005 ... 004mn4.htm
and
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news149.html
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/risk/
2036 - 2069 99942 Apophis (2004 MN4)
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.
Re: Probably crash with the Earth ???
Fightspit wrote:Look here:
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005 ... 004mn4.htm
and
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news149.html
Considering that both articles say and show that the asteroid will come very close to Earth but definitely not crash into it, I'm not entirely sure why you think it will "probably crash with the Earth".
My Celestia page: Spica system, planetary magnitudes script, updated demo.cel, Quad system
Re: Probably crash with the Earth ???
Ok... but you don't talk about the year 2029 (13 April)...
Look:
from :
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news149.html
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I was talking about that - the articles quite clearly says that it's going to miss the Earth then. Heck, even the diagram shows that. Yes, it'll come very close but it won't hit us.
My Celestia page: Spica system, planetary magnitudes script, updated demo.cel, Quad system
I know but I am very surprise the distance will be small when 2004 MN4 will be near of the earth:
the distance is almost 3 Earth....
the distance is almost 3 Earth....
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HDD: Western Digital Raptor 150GB 10000 rpm
OS: Windows Vista Business 32 bits
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Video Card: Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX 768MB GDDR3 384 bits PCI-Express 16x
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Here's what I use in my asteroids.ssc file...
"2004 MN4" "Sol" # Approaches Earth within 35,000km on 04/13-14/2029
{
Class "asteroid"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 0.32 # table lookup using H
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2462240.45833335
SemiMajorAxis 0.922384
Eccentricity 0.191047
Inclination 3.331
AscendingNode 204.472
ArgOfPericenter 126.384
MeanAnomaly 252.098572725691
Period 0.88649041095
}
InfoURL "http://newton.dm.unipi.it/cgi-bin/neodys/neoibo?objects:2004MN4;main"
}
"2004 MN4" "Sol" # Approaches Earth within 35,000km on 04/13-14/2029
{
Class "asteroid"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 0.32 # table lookup using H
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2462240.45833335
SemiMajorAxis 0.922384
Eccentricity 0.191047
Inclination 3.331
AscendingNode 204.472
ArgOfPericenter 126.384
MeanAnomaly 252.098572725691
Period 0.88649041095
}
InfoURL "http://newton.dm.unipi.it/cgi-bin/neodys/neoibo?objects:2004MN4;main"
}
2.8G P-4 512k NVidia FX-5200
Celestia 1.4.1 running on WinXP (NVidia 61.77)
Celestia 1.4.1 running on Ubuntu6.06 (kind of...)
Celestia 1.4.1 running on WinXP (NVidia 61.77)
Celestia 1.4.1 running on Ubuntu6.06 (kind of...)
Hello! It is a nice picture of the near miss, but a bit frightening too!
35000 km is still very close, and the geosynchronous sattelites are in some danger too in 2029, they are at 36000 km high.
Because the asteroid passes close to earth and moon in 2029, as can also be seen in the Celestia simulations, the gravitational interactions make an exact prediction of the next flyby circumstances in 2036 not yet possible. Possibly there will be a spacemission made to get a transponder placed on the asteroid. If new data predict a dangerous passage in 2036 or change the present predictions for 2029, maybe a mission could drop a small rocketmotor on the surface when Apophis comes into our neighbourhood again in 2013. I think the technogy already exists to do all that and it would also make good science. But certainly the asteroid will be closely watched in the next few years! More radar measurements from Arecibo would also be helpful.
I am a new fan of Celestia and very impressed with all its capabilities. I have just been experimenting a bit with what has to go into a .ssc file. Interested in the Near Earth Objects, I downloaded the NEO add-on but discovered that because of missing epochs, the orbits were all out of sync! There seemed to be a close encounter in 2007 with asteroid 1998 SZ27 but on the NASA pages there was no such encounter to be found for this asteroid.. With a new epoch filled in the asteroid appears in a totally different place.
As an experiment I then made a little file with a few asteroids, among them Eros and Apophis, that come near the earth. I made different versions (B,C,D..) with different orbital data as they are available from NASA's JPL pages and from NeoDys among others, and ultimately want to try to find a good orbit approximation for Celestia. JPL and NeoDys also have complete NEO databases online, regularly updated but for converting a whole database to .ssc I'd need to have some script written and I am not a programmer. With lots of data the big .ssc files are maybe not the best approach as can be read in other Asteroid threads in the Celestia developer's section. I'd still have to compute every orbital period from the Kepler elements because Celestia needs to have that. The close encounters are very sensitive to small changes in the period fed into our Celestia program. The only version of Apophis I have made sofar that was really realistic was ApophisE version. Apophis C was way off using the period from the old add-on, Apophis B and D came to about 370000-380000 km using the period data from the JPL page for Apophis at http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/db?name=99942, but that only gives four significant digits. It is possible to get a much better fit with the same orbital data elements if you compute the period again, with Kepler's third law or I think preferably with Newton's formula for the two body problem (You have to convert AU to km and get the mass of the sun, I used the data and formula's given by Wikipedia, the Urls are as comments in the ssc file).
Apophis E came not as close as in the above jpg, 35000 km is close to the official predictions. NeoDys gives a close approach of 0.0002441 AU, 36516 km on 2029/04/13.90679. The time I got was close to that in the picture above; on april 14th 2029 at about 7.28 UT "Apophis E" gets to within 48782 km of Earth. Comparing with the official predictions I think Celestia performs pretty well!
Viewing from the surface of Apophis I got approximately the same view of earth as in the picture above but an half hour earlier; in the Celestia FT1.2 simulation I could see the citylights of Sydney below me just switched on in the gathering dusk. After the flyby of earth the asteroid also passes fairly close to the moon: I got to within 73241 km on april 15th around 2.45 UT. The moon appears halflit, I can see several seas, the star Al Nair in the crane is visible just behind the moon.
I assumed I could just use the orbital data as given by JPL or NeoDys, if there is some correction I have to make for Celestia I would very much appreciate some comments! Because the events happen close to earth, any correction for light travel time in Celestia is not necessary I think.
Below is my little NEO2.ssc, it is very much a work in progress!
Eelco
35000 km is still very close, and the geosynchronous sattelites are in some danger too in 2029, they are at 36000 km high.
Because the asteroid passes close to earth and moon in 2029, as can also be seen in the Celestia simulations, the gravitational interactions make an exact prediction of the next flyby circumstances in 2036 not yet possible. Possibly there will be a spacemission made to get a transponder placed on the asteroid. If new data predict a dangerous passage in 2036 or change the present predictions for 2029, maybe a mission could drop a small rocketmotor on the surface when Apophis comes into our neighbourhood again in 2013. I think the technogy already exists to do all that and it would also make good science. But certainly the asteroid will be closely watched in the next few years! More radar measurements from Arecibo would also be helpful.
I am a new fan of Celestia and very impressed with all its capabilities. I have just been experimenting a bit with what has to go into a .ssc file. Interested in the Near Earth Objects, I downloaded the NEO add-on but discovered that because of missing epochs, the orbits were all out of sync! There seemed to be a close encounter in 2007 with asteroid 1998 SZ27 but on the NASA pages there was no such encounter to be found for this asteroid.. With a new epoch filled in the asteroid appears in a totally different place.
As an experiment I then made a little file with a few asteroids, among them Eros and Apophis, that come near the earth. I made different versions (B,C,D..) with different orbital data as they are available from NASA's JPL pages and from NeoDys among others, and ultimately want to try to find a good orbit approximation for Celestia. JPL and NeoDys also have complete NEO databases online, regularly updated but for converting a whole database to .ssc I'd need to have some script written and I am not a programmer. With lots of data the big .ssc files are maybe not the best approach as can be read in other Asteroid threads in the Celestia developer's section. I'd still have to compute every orbital period from the Kepler elements because Celestia needs to have that. The close encounters are very sensitive to small changes in the period fed into our Celestia program. The only version of Apophis I have made sofar that was really realistic was ApophisE version. Apophis C was way off using the period from the old add-on, Apophis B and D came to about 370000-380000 km using the period data from the JPL page for Apophis at http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/db?name=99942, but that only gives four significant digits. It is possible to get a much better fit with the same orbital data elements if you compute the period again, with Kepler's third law or I think preferably with Newton's formula for the two body problem (You have to convert AU to km and get the mass of the sun, I used the data and formula's given by Wikipedia, the Urls are as comments in the ssc file).
Apophis E came not as close as in the above jpg, 35000 km is close to the official predictions. NeoDys gives a close approach of 0.0002441 AU, 36516 km on 2029/04/13.90679. The time I got was close to that in the picture above; on april 14th 2029 at about 7.28 UT "Apophis E" gets to within 48782 km of Earth. Comparing with the official predictions I think Celestia performs pretty well!
Viewing from the surface of Apophis I got approximately the same view of earth as in the picture above but an half hour earlier; in the Celestia FT1.2 simulation I could see the citylights of Sydney below me just switched on in the gathering dusk. After the flyby of earth the asteroid also passes fairly close to the moon: I got to within 73241 km on april 15th around 2.45 UT. The moon appears halflit, I can see several seas, the star Al Nair in the crane is visible just behind the moon.
I assumed I could just use the orbital data as given by JPL or NeoDys, if there is some correction I have to make for Celestia I would very much appreciate some comments! Because the events happen close to earth, any correction for light travel time in Celestia is not necessary I think.
Below is my little NEO2.ssc, it is very much a work in progress!
Eelco
Code: Select all
# Asteroid (1998 SZ27)
# OSCULATING ORBITAL ELEMENTS JPL data, modified
# (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
# Solution ID = JPL#7
# Epoch = 1998-09-25.0 (2451081.5) TDB
"1998 SZ27B" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.156624
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2451081.5 # 1998-09-25.0 (2451081.5)
Period 0.858602887967015
SemiMajorAxis 0.903223896897877
Eccentricity 0.503798487459495
Inclination 23.4254613259361
AscendingNode 166.836548499305
ArgOfPericenter 47.4999288950028
MeanAnomaly 92.3268034227486
}
Albedo 0.7 # large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 225.314 # random value (0<RP<365)
}
# Asteroid (2004 XP14)
# OSCULATING ORBITAL ELEMENTS JPL data, modified
# (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
# Solution ID = JPL#24
# Epoch = 2006-03-06.0 (2453800.5) TDB
"2004 XP14B" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.248233
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453800.5
Period 1.0872
SemiMajorAxis 1.05732724061819
Eccentricity 0.157407214648322
Inclination 32.9293493361982
AscendingNode 281.080318676519
ArgOfPericenter 275.879911307179
MeanAnomaly 318.514030807865
}
Albedo 0.7 # large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 354.965 # random value (0<RP<365)
}
# Asteroid 433 Eros (1898 DQ)
# Record: 433 SPK-ID: 2000433
# Alternate Designation: 1956 PC
# OSCULATING ORBITAL ELEMENTS JPL data, modified
# (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
# Solution ID = JPL#216
# Epoch = 2006-03-06.0 (2453800.5) TDB
"ErosB" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "eros.cmod"
Texture "eros.*"
# NormalMap "erosbump2k.jpg"
# Color sampled from true color photo taken by NEAR
Color [ 0.52 0.47 0.42 ]
BlendTexture true
Radius 16.3 # maximum semi-axis
MeshCenter [ -1.262 0.168 -0.164 ]
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453800.5
Period 1.7607 # average
SemiMajorAxis 1.4580892888287
Eccentricity 0.222762647884337
Inclination 10.8289272430019
AscendingNode 304.389510695341
ArgOfPericenter 178.655930670928
MeanAnomaly 240.124479042327
}
RotationPeriod 5.270
Obliquity 78.70
EquatorAscendingNode 107.23
RotationOffset 338.165
Albedo 0.250
}
#With NEODys data
"ErosC" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "eros.cmod"
Texture "eros.*"
# NormalMap "erosbump2k.jpg"
# Color sampled from true color photo taken by NEAR
Color [ 0.52 0.47 0.42 ]
BlendTexture true
Radius 16.3 # maximum semi-axis
MeshCenter [ -1.262 0.168 -0.164 ]
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453700.500000
Period 1.760687
SemiMajorAxis 1.4580631958200001
Eccentricity 0.22278507258045502
Inclination 10.829209003110577
AscendingNode 304.39021137804355
ArgOfPericenter 178.65736864871602
MeanAnomaly 184.14272428196659
}
RotationPeriod 5.270
Obliquity 78.70
EquatorAscendingNode 107.23
RotationOffset 338.165
Albedo 0.250
}
# Asteroid 99942 Apophis (2004 MN4)
# Record: 99942 SPK-ID: 2099942,3264226
# Alternate Designation: none
# Formerly known as "2004 MN4 " Close pass in 2029
# OSCULATING ORBITAL ELEMENTS JPL data, modified
# (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
# Solution ID = JPL#117
# Epoch = 2006-03-06.0 (2453800.5) TDB
"(99942) ApophisB " "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.248233 # no data H = 19.23
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453800.5
Period 0.8859
SemiMajorAxis 0.922395885698301
Eccentricity 0.191040055815886
Inclination 3.33122456383929
AscendingNode 204.46221643007
ArgOfPericenter 126.355730341314
MeanAnomaly 222.272919636795
}
Albedo 0.7 # large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 358.145 # random value (0<RP<365)
}
#With NeoDys data
"(99942) ApophisC " "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.248233 # no data H = 19.22
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453700.500000
Period 0.885312 #Calculate this again?
SemiMajorAxis 9.2242004439778602E-01
Eccentricity 1.9101550840095935E-01
Inclination 3.3310207852633935E+00
AscendingNode 2.0446578233200452E+02
ArgOfPericenter 1.2636445584120514E+02
MeanAnomaly 1.1100030221006553E+02
}
Albedo 0.7 # large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 358.145 # random value (0<RP<365)
}
#With NeoDys data
"(99942) ApophisD " "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.420 # no data H = 19.22
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453700.500000
Period 0.8859 #Calculate this again?
SemiMajorAxis 9.2242004439778602E-01
Eccentricity 1.9101550840095935E-01
Inclination 3.3310207852633935E+00
AscendingNode 2.0446578233200452E+02
ArgOfPericenter 1.2636445584120514E+02
MeanAnomaly 1.1100030221006553E+02
}
Albedo 0.7 # large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 358.145 # random value (0<RP<365)
}
# With NeoDys data, and period recalculated from value
# NeoDys semimajoraxis with formula for two-body problem
# from Sir Isaac Newton ref
# http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-major_axis
# http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_gravitational_parameter
"(99942) ApophisE " "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.420 # no data but guess made from H = 19.22
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2453700.500000
Period 0.88591799766 #Recalculated
SemiMajorAxis 9.2242004439778602E-01
Eccentricity 1.9101550840095935E-01
Inclination 3.3310207852633935E+00
AscendingNode 2.0446578233200452E+02
ArgOfPericenter 1.2636445584120514E+02
MeanAnomaly 1.1100030221006553E+02
}
Albedo 0.7 # large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 358.145 # random value (0<RP<365)
}
As you mention, simple Keplerian orbits are valid only at the times of their Epochs. If you look at the bodies they describe at times more and more distant from that Epoch, they will be further and further away from where they should be. This is because Celestia cannot calculate the gravitational effects that change the Keplerian orbital parameters.
JPL's Horizons ephemeris service can be used to calculate xyz trajectories which may be more accurate.
JPL's Horizons ephemeris service can be used to calculate xyz trajectories which may be more accurate.
Selden
An other dangerous asteroid,1950 DA:
From: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/1950da/
From: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/1950da/animations.html
When high-precision radar meaurements were included in a new orbit solution, a potentially very close approach to the Earth on March 16, 2880 was discovered to exist
From: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/1950da/
From: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/1950da/animations.html
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HDD: Western Digital Raptor 150GB 10000 rpm
OS: Windows Vista Business 32 bits
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Video Card: Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX 768MB GDDR3 384 bits PCI-Express 16x
HDD: Western Digital Raptor 150GB 10000 rpm
OS: Windows Vista Business 32 bits
Selden, thanks for the comments! Fightspit luckily that is still far off in the future! By the way, as I'm on dial-up link, this animation is okay but unfortunately some of the threads with a lot of images don't always load. But that is just minor detail. I should report there is small bug in my Neo2.ssc: in computing the orbital periods I used a tropical year of 365.242191 days to convert seconds to years. But I just found in this thread http://celestiaproject.net/forum/viewtopic.php ... t=tropical
that I should have used a sideral year of 365.25636 days which is about 20 minutes longer. My value for a tropical year comes from my copy of Peter Duffet-Smith's 'Easy PC Astronmy' which, although not entirely up to date to modern PCs (The programs that come with it are DOS and the Turbo Pascal bug has to be corrected for modern clockspeeds) is still a very valuable reference and introduction to Astronomy.
I will work a little more on my .ssc files, I see that JPL has updated a solution #119 for Apophis, I will try that out.
Modeling gravitational interactions in Celestia in the future is something of a dream, but I realize it conflicts a bit with the whole architecture of the Celestia program. More custom orbits, as an alternative to XYZ orbits, like the VSOP solutions, is possible I think but would require a lot of work and expertise; I believe making them is something of an art! Been looking into the latest solutions for the moon orbit a bit... Maybe for another thread one day!
Thanks, Eelco
A postscript: Strange, when using a sidereal year of 356.25636 days to compute an orbital period out of the SemiMajorAxis, (for "Apophis G"), the perceived accuracy of the flyby in 2029 is more or less destroyed using the JPL data. It could be a coincidence, the osculating elements are not for 2029 but for 2006, but it is still strange that a tropical year gave a much better fit (used in "Apophis E") and also matched the JPL value for the orbital period in four decimal digits. This is a bit confusing. Could it be that the VSOP orbit of the earth actually uses the tropical year?
Eelco
that I should have used a sideral year of 365.25636 days which is about 20 minutes longer. My value for a tropical year comes from my copy of Peter Duffet-Smith's 'Easy PC Astronmy' which, although not entirely up to date to modern PCs (The programs that come with it are DOS and the Turbo Pascal bug has to be corrected for modern clockspeeds) is still a very valuable reference and introduction to Astronomy.
I will work a little more on my .ssc files, I see that JPL has updated a solution #119 for Apophis, I will try that out.
Modeling gravitational interactions in Celestia in the future is something of a dream, but I realize it conflicts a bit with the whole architecture of the Celestia program. More custom orbits, as an alternative to XYZ orbits, like the VSOP solutions, is possible I think but would require a lot of work and expertise; I believe making them is something of an art! Been looking into the latest solutions for the moon orbit a bit... Maybe for another thread one day!
Thanks, Eelco
A postscript: Strange, when using a sidereal year of 356.25636 days to compute an orbital period out of the SemiMajorAxis, (for "Apophis G"), the perceived accuracy of the flyby in 2029 is more or less destroyed using the JPL data. It could be a coincidence, the osculating elements are not for 2029 but for 2006, but it is still strange that a tropical year gave a much better fit (used in "Apophis E") and also matched the JPL value for the orbital period in four decimal digits. This is a bit confusing. Could it be that the VSOP orbit of the earth actually uses the tropical year?
Eelco
Apophis postscript #2: Curious as it may sound, the close fit achieved by the "ApophisE" orbit was probably pure coincidence of picking exactly the right wrong parameter! Tropical year should have been sidereal and the calculation of the period was wrong. The elements were for epoch 2006, not 2029 but somehow these three errors cancelled out including any other inaccuracies.
But in the mean time some new official data: three new datapoints lead JPL to do a new JPL solution ID#120 and with a telnet session with JPL Horizons I managed to get osculating elements of this solution for an epoch two months before the flyby. Now the accuracy of the simulation I think should depend mostly on the precise placing of Earth in Celestia at february 13th 00:00 hrs in 2029, two months before close approach. If I haven't made lots of new typo's or interpreted symbols and orbital element designations wrong... Sorry, I could have picked a later date, but this should work too, next version I make some day should be epoch april 13th but I did not yet get that data from JPL Horizons. I also found some data on the rotation period of the asteroid. I haven't yet checked what the simulation will do: so this is totally new data if you want to try this! The latest ApophisJ.ssc version, I hope it will be a miss..
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/db?name=99942
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/da_legend
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_year
Raw JPL telnet data:
2462180.500000000 = A.D. 2029-Feb-13 00:00:00.0000 (CT)
EC= 1.911748408391438E-01 QR= 7.460277553477852E-01 IN= 3.341614784786085E+00
OM= 2.038689088263874E+02 W = 1.266945746950668E+02 Tp= 2462337.140250629280
N = 1.112637193884422E+00 MA= 1.857162310906158E+02 TA= 1.839558229883659E+02
A = 9.223597299097097E-01 AD= 1.098691704471634E+00 PR= 3.235556046290107E+02
EC=eccentricity
QR=perihelion distance (not used in Celestia)
IN=inclination
OM=node=Longitude of the Ascending Node=AscendingNode
W=w=Argument of Perihelion=ArgOfPericenter
Tp=Time since Perihelion(=periapsis?) Passage (not used)
N=mean motion (deg/d) (not used)
MA=M=MeanAnomaly (deg)
TA=?
A=a=Semi-major Axis
AD=? probably Q=Aphelion Distance (not used)
PR=Period (days) I assume mean solar days
But in the mean time some new official data: three new datapoints lead JPL to do a new JPL solution ID#120 and with a telnet session with JPL Horizons I managed to get osculating elements of this solution for an epoch two months before the flyby. Now the accuracy of the simulation I think should depend mostly on the precise placing of Earth in Celestia at february 13th 00:00 hrs in 2029, two months before close approach. If I haven't made lots of new typo's or interpreted symbols and orbital element designations wrong... Sorry, I could have picked a later date, but this should work too, next version I make some day should be epoch april 13th but I did not yet get that data from JPL Horizons. I also found some data on the rotation period of the asteroid. I haven't yet checked what the simulation will do: so this is totally new data if you want to try this! The latest ApophisJ.ssc version, I hope it will be a miss..
Code: Select all
# Version Apophis J, JPL data, solution JPL#120
# period directly from JPL Horizons data
# Asteroid 99942 Apophis (2004 MN4)
# Record: 99942 SPK-ID: 2099942,3264226
# Alternate Designation: none
# OSCULATING ORBITAL ELEMENTS
# (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
# Solution ID = JPL#120
# Epoch = 2462180.500000000 = A.D. 2029-Feb-13 00:00:00.0000 (CT)
"(99942) ApophisJ " "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.420 # no data but guess made from H = 19.23
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2462180.500000000
Period 0.88583154104958351104
SemiMajorAxis 9.223597299097097E-01
Eccentricity 1.911748408391438E-01
Inclination 3.341614784786085E+00
AscendingNode 2.038689088263874E+02
ArgOfPericenter 1.266945746950668E+02
MeanAnomaly 1.857162310906158E+02
}
Albedo 0.7 # fiction, large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 30.5376 # (hours) http://earn.dlr.de/nea/099942.htm
}
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/db?name=99942
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/da_legend
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_year
Raw JPL telnet data:
2462180.500000000 = A.D. 2029-Feb-13 00:00:00.0000 (CT)
EC= 1.911748408391438E-01 QR= 7.460277553477852E-01 IN= 3.341614784786085E+00
OM= 2.038689088263874E+02 W = 1.266945746950668E+02 Tp= 2462337.140250629280
N = 1.112637193884422E+00 MA= 1.857162310906158E+02 TA= 1.839558229883659E+02
A = 9.223597299097097E-01 AD= 1.098691704471634E+00 PR= 3.235556046290107E+02
EC=eccentricity
QR=perihelion distance (not used in Celestia)
IN=inclination
OM=node=Longitude of the Ascending Node=AscendingNode
W=w=Argument of Perihelion=ArgOfPericenter
Tp=Time since Perihelion(=periapsis?) Passage (not used)
N=mean motion (deg/d) (not used)
MA=M=MeanAnomaly (deg)
TA=?
A=a=Semi-major Axis
AD=? probably Q=Aphelion Distance (not used)
PR=Period (days) I assume mean solar days
This is the version I actually had meant to give, Apophis K with orbital elements valid about 24 hours before the close approach (to take into consideration more of the gravitational attraction of the earth)
This version is more accurate close to earth but not very accurate in the period preceding it, also not of course after the approach, after the big bend in the actual orbit caused by the earth's gravity.
The approach margins shown by Celestia are I think fairly realistic but I have not yet compared it to the official JPL ones for this solution ID JPL#120.
Celestia gives:
Apophis J, Epoch February 13th 00:00, Close approach 41250 km at 2029-April-14 00:32 UTC
Apophis K, Epoch April 13th 00:00, Close approach 40626 km at 2029-April-13 22:21 UTC
If you view this tracking the Earth with night side lights enabled, the effect is fairly spectacular, (I'm seeing it in Celestia FT1.2), in these orbit approximations it is mainly Europe and North and South-America that you see close by below, the continents lighting up by all the electric lights just after sunset.
Code: Select all
# Version Apophis K, JPL data, solution JPL#120
# period directly from JPL Horizons data
# Asteroid 99942 Apophis (2004 MN4)
# Record: 99942 SPK-ID: 2099942,3264226
# Alternate Designation: none
# OSCULATING ORBITAL ELEMENTS
# (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
# Solution ID = JPL#120
# Epoch = 2462239.500000000 = A.D. 2029-Apr-13 00:00:00.0000 (CT)
"(99942) ApophisK " "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Radius 0.420 # no data but guess made from H = 19.23
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2462239.500000000
Period 0.88442930438275076760
SemiMajorAxis 9.213861000200370E-01
Eccentricity 1.956785478257907E-01
Inclination 3.422682379729061E+00
AscendingNode 2.037855225035266E+02
ArgOfPericenter 1.266241140169406E+02
MeanAnomaly 2.520302138059853E+02
}
Albedo 0.7 # fiction, large because we want it visible!!!
RotationPeriod 30.5376 #(hrs) http://earn.dlr.de/nea/099942.htm
}
This version is more accurate close to earth but not very accurate in the period preceding it, also not of course after the approach, after the big bend in the actual orbit caused by the earth's gravity.
The approach margins shown by Celestia are I think fairly realistic but I have not yet compared it to the official JPL ones for this solution ID JPL#120.
Celestia gives:
Apophis J, Epoch February 13th 00:00, Close approach 41250 km at 2029-April-14 00:32 UTC
Apophis K, Epoch April 13th 00:00, Close approach 40626 km at 2029-April-13 22:21 UTC
If you view this tracking the Earth with night side lights enabled, the effect is fairly spectacular, (I'm seeing it in Celestia FT1.2), in these orbit approximations it is mainly Europe and North and South-America that you see close by below, the continents lighting up by all the electric lights just after sunset.