[amsat-bb] Correction: Chandrayaan-2 not using "Earth Gravity Assist"
Scott
scott23192 at gmail.com
Mon Jul 29 21:05:52 UTC 2019
Hello!
One of the things I enjoy most about the hobby is learning new things. If
that comes at the expense of correcting something I said or did
incorrectly, that's fine.
I recently posted on Twitter about how fortunate I had been to be in the
right place at the right time to record an entire 2-hour fly-by of the
ISRO Chandrayaan-2 spacecraft which is working towards a moon landing in a
few weeks.
https://twitter.com/scott23192/status/1155528793831944193
... in that post, I referred to the situation as an Earth
"gravity-assist". That was not the correct term for the flight
of Chandrayaan-2 and if you'd like to hear what the difference is, please
read on.
Edgar, DF2MZ, was kind enough to fill me in on the distinction. To
accomplish a gravity-assist, an object (Chandrayaan-2 in this example)
needs to fly by another object (Earth in this case) in a path ideally
described as "hyperbolic". Put simply, it's a one-time fly-by as opposed
to a recurring orbit. You can read about the theory of this type of
alignment here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_assist
This is not the case with Chandrayaan-2, which is why the ISRO is using a
schedule of rocket firings to boost its orbit farther and farther from
Earth. When an object like Chandrayaan-2 is in a recurring orbit (often
described as "elliptical"), it's more-or-less going to stay there unless
outside forces change that. I guess the most common forces would be
gravity or rocket firings.
For an amazing, mathematically correct animation of Chandrayaan-2's journey
(complete w/ on-schedule rocket firings), check out:
http://sankara.net/chandrayaan2.html
(the last "big loop" that eventually makes the lunar capture possible will
blow your mind)
So that's the difference between the two circumstances and I wanted to set
the record straight. I greatly enjoyed being able to record the
spacecraft's S-Band downlink throughout the entire pass but didn't want to
leave an incorrect description of the pass hanging out there. In the end
it was a nice bonus to learn something new about the nature of orbits since
they play such a major role in our hobby.
Thanks,
-Scott, K4KDR
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