chris wrote:There are different JPL ephemerides. I think that the one of most interest to Celestia users is DE406, not DE405. The DE406 ephemeris covers the time span from years -3001 to +3000, while DE405 spans 1600 to 2200. Each 300 year block of DE406 is about 10 MB, so 200 MB for the whole 6000 years covered. DE405 runs to 4.7 MB for each 50 years, so it's roughly three times as large as DE406 for the equivalent timespan. DE405 also includes nutations and librations; Celestia doesn't make use of these yet.
Regarding the difference in accuracy between DE405 and DE406, the JPL documentations says this:This is the same ephemeris as DE405, though the accuracy of the
interpolating polynomials has been lessened (interpolation on the
64-day mesh points remains exact, however). For DE406/LE406, the
interpolating accuracy is no worse than 25 meters for any planet and
no worse than 1 meter for the moon.
Good enough for most Celestia users, I think . . .
--Chris
Thanks, Chris,
I used DE 405 as an example since --independently of Celestia-- it is supposed to be the more accurate set, notably including nutations and librations. I think it's about time to think about n's & l's also for Celestia
Bye Fridger