We choose to run Orbiter sims, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.
Showing posts with label Orbiter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orbiter. Show all posts
2014/03/09
Orbiter: The shape of things to come (eventually)
The creator of Orbiter Space Flight Simulation ,Dr. Martin Schweiger, posted this YouTube video yesterday on the forum.
I tend to stay away from beta versions of s/w...too much like work. I tend to think a lot of ATM s/w is released so we field techs can finish finding all of the bugs The video shows the current progress for the next major release/version of the simulator.
My jaw didn't really drop open until 31 seconds into it. I can't wait to start using it...especially for further YouTube videos of my own.
Simply phenomenal !
2013/12/22
45th Anniversary of Earthrise
OK...so I've done this bit with Orbiter about 3.5 years ago while developing the Apollo 8 Scenario Pack for AMSO.
I've also blogged on the iconic photo known as, "Earthrise", before too. See here.
But the people at Goddard Space Center have come out with a new video based on new findings.
Besides, this Tuesday (Christmas Eve) is the 45th anniversary...
Here is the direct link to the YouTube Video: http://youtu.be/dE-vOscpiNc
More multimedia can be found on this page as well: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a004100/a004129/
I've also blogged on the iconic photo known as, "Earthrise", before too. See here.
But the people at Goddard Space Center have come out with a new video based on new findings.
Besides, this Tuesday (Christmas Eve) is the 45th anniversary...
Here is the direct link to the YouTube Video: http://youtu.be/dE-vOscpiNc
More multimedia can be found on this page as well: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a004100/a004129/
2013/07/29
Six Words
Attribution: xkcd
Six words that you never say at NASA.
Dear Reader (if any), you are probably wondering why I'm making a big deal of this. Since the embedded image above doesn't show what happens when you mouse over the image, here it is again as a screenshot:
This is the equivalent of being nominated, or actually winning, a Nerd Oscar.
Eat your heart out, Sheldon Cooper!
Six words that you never say at NASA.
Dear Reader (if any), you are probably wondering why I'm making a big deal of this. Since the embedded image above doesn't show what happens when you mouse over the image, here it is again as a screenshot:
This is the equivalent of being nominated, or actually winning, a Nerd Oscar.
Eat your heart out, Sheldon Cooper!
2013/03/24
Pizza on the Moon?
"It all started when I found the green meteorite."
Seriously, this post idea started about 2 weeks ago after reading a thread on Orbiter Forum. It was started by Bloodworth, and discussed food franchises on the Moon - specifically, "on our lunar bases." I was flattered to see, "Niven's Nachos", on the list. Not quite so with his entry for "Jules Verne Vegan Cafe". For you, Dear Reader (if any), not in the "know", Lunar Base Niven resides in the lunar far side crater of Jules Verne.
What really intrigued me was Pipcard's entry. After viewing the commercial for Domino's Pizza, Japan, and doing a little background research, I thought I'd add to this Internet meme (however old and/or short lived it may be). I think that it is a mere publicity stunt in reaction to Pizza Hut's first delivery to the International Space Station. Estimates for this project are $21 billion...their pizza just isn't that good!
I was struck by the similarities between the artist's conception and my own add-on (yes, another opportunity for shameless self-promotion). Dome shaped with solar panels in the background. Turn about is fair play...
So, the following is my first public exhibition of my mesh/texture creation with Wings 3D:
Finally, after adding this mesh into Niven.cfg:
Seriously, this post idea started about 2 weeks ago after reading a thread on Orbiter Forum. It was started by Bloodworth, and discussed food franchises on the Moon - specifically, "on our lunar bases." I was flattered to see, "Niven's Nachos", on the list. Not quite so with his entry for "Jules Verne Vegan Cafe". For you, Dear Reader (if any), not in the "know", Lunar Base Niven resides in the lunar far side crater of Jules Verne.
What really intrigued me was Pipcard's entry. After viewing the commercial for Domino's Pizza, Japan, and doing a little background research, I thought I'd add to this Internet meme (however old and/or short lived it may be). I think that it is a mere publicity stunt in reaction to Pizza Hut's first delivery to the International Space Station. Estimates for this project are $21 billion...their pizza just isn't that good!
I was struck by the similarities between the artist's conception and my own add-on (yes, another opportunity for shameless self-promotion). Dome shaped with solar panels in the background. Turn about is fair play...
So, the following is my first public exhibition of my mesh/texture creation with Wings 3D:
Finally, after adding this mesh into Niven.cfg:
(Click on images to enlarge)
THIS ISN'T an update to my add-on, BTW. Above view is looking roughly south from the base.
2013/03/09
Comet C/2013 A1 (Siding Spring) and Mars
![]() |
(Last updated 05/11/2013. Click on image to enlarge.) |
The screenshot above was generated using the freeware space simulation Orbiter. It depicts Comet C/2013 A1, aka Siding Spring, during its closest approach to Mars on October 19, 2014.
Also used to generate the above screenshot was the Horizons Web Interface, maintained by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology. I generated the ephemeris with this web interface, and then plugged the numbers into an Orbiter scenario.
There's only an observational arc of 211 days - so there WILL be a really decent fly by - with enough refinement to the projected orbit (for now) to say it WILL NOT hit Mars.
Per SpaceObs.org:
Since C/2013 A1 is a hyperbolic comet and moves in a retrograde orbit, its velocity with respect to the planet will be very high, approximately 56 km/s. With the current estimate of the absolute magnitude of the nucleus M2 = 10.3, which might indicate the diameter from 10 to 50 km, the energy of impact might reach the equivalent of staggering 2×10¹ยบ megatonnes! This kind of event can leave a crater 500 km across and 2 km deep. Such an event would overshadow even the famous bombardment of Jupiter by the disintegrated comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 in July 1994, which by some estimates was originally 15 km in diameter.Stay tuned, Dear Reader (if any). As new observations over time refine the orbit of this comet, I plan to update the screenshot and/or post a short video derived from an Orbiter scenario.
Edit:
A short video:
2012/02/06
Lunar Base Niven v.3.0 RELEASED!
Yes, it is RELEASED!
From today, it will only be available from Orbit Hangar.
Enjoy, Dear Reader (if any)!
2012/02/03
Lunar Base Niven for Orbiter 2012 is finished!
It is completed, and available only on my website until Monday, February 6. On Monday, I will release it on Orbiter Hangar Mod.
Why until Monday? Because I turn 50 then. Yes, I'll be officially an old fart.
Refer to the blog title image for a peek.
Why until Monday? Because I turn 50 then. Yes, I'll be officially an old fart.
Refer to the blog title image for a peek.
2012/01/07
Lunar Base Niven 2012 updates
I finally had enough time and ambition to start adding the finishing touches to my Orbiter add-on surface base, Lunar Base Niven. As of now, I've been working about 3 weeks on it, and estimate another 3-4 weeks before it is done.
I've animated portions of the domes and the doors on the surface locks. I've added UCGO surface vehicles programmed to visit the outer laying portions of the base (the nuclear power plant, the VLA antennas, and the solar power panel farms). I've also added UMmu breathable areas to the domes and locks.
Why the name Niven? I choose it as a tribute to one of my top five science fiction authors, Larry Niven. I would have choosen Heinlein...but it was already taken.
Here's 2 screen shots, both from the same position. Remember, dear Reader (if any), click on any of the images to enlarge/download.
During lunar day:
During lunar night:
As stated in the original documentation:
I've animated portions of the domes and the doors on the surface locks. I've added UCGO surface vehicles programmed to visit the outer laying portions of the base (the nuclear power plant, the VLA antennas, and the solar power panel farms). I've also added UMmu breathable areas to the domes and locks.
Why the name Niven? I choose it as a tribute to one of my top five science fiction authors, Larry Niven. I would have choosen Heinlein...but it was already taken.
Here's 2 screen shots, both from the same position. Remember, dear Reader (if any), click on any of the images to enlarge/download.
During lunar day:
During lunar night:
As stated in the original documentation:
Most of the structures are like icebergs with most of the volume below the surface in order to provide shielding against the occasional solar flare and coronal mass ejection. Each dome is actually a sphere with a diameter of 110 meters. Volume of each is 641,431 m3, which gives the entire habitat complex a total volume of 5.8 million m3. This is about 5 times the size of the Pentagon, or, about 2 times the size of the World Trade Center.Here's a graphic of the entire base, as published in the original release:
2011/09/18
UARS and Chicken Little
Yes...the sky is falling!
Actually, just UARS (Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite). But NASA is predicting only 1 in 3200 chance that a part of it will hit a person. With an orbital inclination of 57 degrees, UARS will reenter and parts of it will strike somewhere between 57 deg north latitude and 57 deg south latitude. Which covers most of the inhabited surface of Earth...but there's a lot of ocean in that zone as well.
Launched on 09/12/1991, it was designed to study Earth's atmosphere, particularly the ozone layer. The original mission life was 3 years, and finally decommissioned in 2005 with a de-orbit burn (using up all of its fuel) in December '05. Since then, it has been slowly spiraling down and latest estimates put reentry happening on September 23, 2011...plus/minus a day. Dear reader, (if any), may back check facts here and here.

Source: SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration
NASA's ORSAT Orbital debris projection: (pay attention to the parts with a Demise Altitude of 0 km).
Wait for it....now, the Orbiter angle.
A fellow Orbinaut was smart enough to post simulation scenarios for UARS in this thread at O-F. Note that the scenario was created with and intended for ver 2010P1 of Orbiter. I downloaded and ran this just for grins and giggles. My simulation run predicts that Australia (somewhere SW of Brisbane) will get hammered with the debris...again! I say again, because another piece of US space hardware, Skylab, managed to shower the Aussies with pieces of itself back in July of 1979. Apparently, the Shire of Esperance fined the United States $400 for littering, a fine which remained unpaid for 30 years.
Here is a screen shot of my sim run (click on image to enlarge):
And a screen shot from Google Earth (click on image to enlarge):
Or visit my web site to download the *.kmz file (UARS Demise) and open that file with Google Earth.
How's this for synchronicity?
The first time I started the scenario with Orbiter, my mp3 play list within Orbiter started playing "Re-Entry" from In the Shadow of the Moon soundtrack.
Rather fitting, and spooky at the same time.
Actually, just UARS (Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite). But NASA is predicting only 1 in 3200 chance that a part of it will hit a person. With an orbital inclination of 57 degrees, UARS will reenter and parts of it will strike somewhere between 57 deg north latitude and 57 deg south latitude. Which covers most of the inhabited surface of Earth...but there's a lot of ocean in that zone as well.
Launched on 09/12/1991, it was designed to study Earth's atmosphere, particularly the ozone layer. The original mission life was 3 years, and finally decommissioned in 2005 with a de-orbit burn (using up all of its fuel) in December '05. Since then, it has been slowly spiraling down and latest estimates put reentry happening on September 23, 2011...plus/minus a day. Dear reader, (if any), may back check facts here and here.
Source: SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration
NASA's ORSAT Orbital debris projection: (pay attention to the parts with a Demise Altitude of 0 km).
Wait for it....now, the Orbiter angle.
A fellow Orbinaut was smart enough to post simulation scenarios for UARS in this thread at O-F. Note that the scenario was created with and intended for ver 2010P1 of Orbiter. I downloaded and ran this just for grins and giggles. My simulation run predicts that Australia (somewhere SW of Brisbane) will get hammered with the debris...again! I say again, because another piece of US space hardware, Skylab, managed to shower the Aussies with pieces of itself back in July of 1979. Apparently, the Shire of Esperance fined the United States $400 for littering, a fine which remained unpaid for 30 years.
Here is a screen shot of my sim run (click on image to enlarge):
And a screen shot from Google Earth (click on image to enlarge):
Or visit my web site to download the *.kmz file (UARS Demise) and open that file with Google Earth.
How's this for synchronicity?
The first time I started the scenario with Orbiter, my mp3 play list within Orbiter started playing "Re-Entry" from In the Shadow of the Moon soundtrack.
Rather fitting, and spooky at the same time.
2011/08/28
2011/08/20
Orbiter 2010 Unofficial trailer
2011/05/18
Fox News Houston reports on Orbiter
Not too bad...they mostly got it right. But "a little complex" is an oversimplification.
http://www.myfoxhouston.com/dpp/morning_news/my_tech_guy/110516-download-free-space-shuttle-simulator
Since this was a Fox News outlet, I'm totally surprised that it even got a mention on Orbiter-Forum. Most of the community is rabid anti-Fox...sometimes to the point of derangement.
http://www.myfoxhouston.com/dpp/morning_news/my_tech_guy/110516-download-free-space-shuttle-simulator
Since this was a Fox News outlet, I'm totally surprised that it even got a mention on Orbiter-Forum. Most of the community is rabid anti-Fox...sometimes to the point of derangement.
2011/05/15
My Orbiter Life
When I first found Orbiter in March 2006, I was then playing with Eagle Lander 3D (which could only simulate the Apollo lunar missions - and only those portions that happened in lunar orbit), I was elated that I could fully simulate an entire Apollo mission. As my 1st blog entry states, "I was hopelessly hooked".
I have spent most of my life being aware that most of the other people around me aren't as smart - certainly not rocket scientist smart. I had to learn at an early age to recognize that "deer in the headlights" stare in other's eyes when I got too zealous or detailed in my descriptions of the way shit works...and dial it back a little at times. Then I found the Orbiter community...and now I feel I've found home.
Since finding Orbiter, I've tried sharing it with friends and co-workers, and have only found one interested enough to even try it. Orbiter isn't the first topic, but I bring it up when the person has related that he enjoys video games and is extremely computer literate.
Simulations, as a genre, aren't all that popular with most gamers because, IMO, there's a learning curve (or too steep), too much detail...etc. It is though most of them suffer, IMO, from some degree of AADD. Or, they shirk from the realization that they actually have to "plan" something to achieve goals.
The one person who even tried it, while growing up, was the first of my son's friends to get the latest and greatest gaming console as soon as they hit the market. This person also showed early aptitude with computers and is very gifted musically too. By the time he asked me for help with an Orbiter scenario, he had successfully gotten the stock DG into orbit. Reference here or here. He stayed with Orbiter another week or two...he didn't quite get how to set up a orbital rendezvous with another spacecraft, so it lost interest for him. I haven't bother to bring up that topic with him anymore...some people just aren't cut out for it.
As far as what others think of Orbiter...I don't really care. We're all blessed with different talents...THIS ONE IS MINE.
2011/03/17
2417 days 18 hrs 29 min 20 sec
Mercury has its first artificial satellite now...another American Space First.
On a more personal note, I finally spotted Mercury with the naked eye tonight for the first time too. Only took me a little over 49 years.
On a more personal note, I finally spotted Mercury with the naked eye tonight for the first time too. Only took me a little over 49 years.
MESSENGER Mission News March 17, 2011 http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/ |
MESSENGER Begins Historic Orbit around Mercury |
At 9:10 p.m. EDT, engineers in the MESSENGER Mission Operations Center at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md., received the anticipated radiometric signals confirming nominal burn shutdown and successful insertion of the MESSENGER probe into orbit around the planet Mercury. The spacecraft rotated back to the Earth by 9:45 p.m. EDT, and started transmitting data. Upon review of these data, the engineering and operations teams confirmed that the burn executed nominally with all subsystems reporting a clean burn and no logged errors. MESSENGER’s main thruster fired for approximately 15 minutes at 8:45 p.m., slowing the spacecraft by 1,929 miles per hour (862 meters per second) and easing it into the planned eccentric orbit about Mercury. The rendezvous took place about 96 million miles (155 million kilometers) from Earth. “Achieving Mercury orbit was by far the biggest milestone since MESSENGER was launched more than six and a half years ago,” says MESSENGER Project Manager Peter Bedini, of APL. “This accomplishment is the fruit of a tremendous amount of labor on the part of the navigation, guidance-and-control, and mission operations teams, who shepherded the spacecraft through its 4.9-billion-mile [7.9-billion-kilometer] journey.” For the next several weeks, APL engineers will be focused on ensuring that MESSENGER’s systems are all working well in Mercury’s harsh thermal environment. Starting on March 23, the instruments will be turned on and checked out, and on April 4 the primary science phase of the mission will begin. “Despite its proximity to Earth, the planet Mercury has for decades been comparatively unexplored,” adds MESSENGER Principal Investigator Sean Solomon, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. “For the first time in history, a scientific observatory is in orbit about our solar system’s innermost planet. Mercury’s secrets, and the implications they hold for the formation and evolution of Earth-like planets, are about to be revealed.” |
2011/03/14
MESSENGER MOI
MOI is shorthand for Mercury Orbit Insertion. Currently scheduled for March 18, 2011 at 0045 UTC (that's March 17, 2011 at 1845 MDT).
Per the spacecraft's website, a webcast starts at 1755 MDT...my guess is that this will be the only live coverage of the event. Also available on the website, under "Animation", are two Quick Time movies...the quality is LOTS better than the animations of anything Apollo...waaaay back in the day.
Or, dear reader (if any), if you are hopelessly addicted to Orbiter...then download the scenario pack I just uploaded to Orbit-Hangar. This is a "little" more interactive. Plus you get the opportunity to totally FUBAR a multi-million dollar spacecraft (simulated...of course).
A screen shot from the scenario:
Per the spacecraft's website, a webcast starts at 1755 MDT...my guess is that this will be the only live coverage of the event. Also available on the website, under "Animation", are two Quick Time movies...the quality is LOTS better than the animations of anything Apollo...waaaay back in the day.
Or, dear reader (if any), if you are hopelessly addicted to Orbiter...then download the scenario pack I just uploaded to Orbit-Hangar. This is a "little" more interactive. Plus you get the opportunity to totally FUBAR a multi-million dollar spacecraft (simulated...of course).
A screen shot from the scenario:
2011/03/05
How Big Really?
Hat tip to Bob at http://www.bobsbs.com/ for the link.
This is from a BBC website showing scale of objects against a Google Map of whatever address in the world one cares to supply.
The following images were overlaid, "somewhere in Utah". After playing with this, I walked outside to get a "down to earth" idea of the scale of the following objects.
International Space Station:
Apollo 11 Landing Site (showing the ground covered by the moonwalk):
This is from a BBC website showing scale of objects against a Google Map of whatever address in the world one cares to supply.
The following images were overlaid, "somewhere in Utah". After playing with this, I walked outside to get a "down to earth" idea of the scale of the following objects.
International Space Station:
Apollo 11 Landing Site (showing the ground covered by the moonwalk):
Have fun, dear reader (if any). Your results may (will) vary.
MOI Animations
More MESSENGER news.
For the unknowing, MOI = Mercury Orbit Insertion. Scheduled for March 18, 2011 at 0045 UTC.
These animations were posted by NASA / Johns Hopkins Advanced Physics Laboratory on the mission website.
The first one is simple, and shows the spacecraft from a 3rd person perspective...with an inset showing the trajectory.
The second one is also 3rd person, and shows detailed flight numbers.
Hope you, dear reader (if any) have a better experience waiting for the Quick Time movies to download and play. I found it a bit choppy.
For the unknowing, MOI = Mercury Orbit Insertion. Scheduled for March 18, 2011 at 0045 UTC.
These animations were posted by NASA / Johns Hopkins Advanced Physics Laboratory on the mission website.
The first one is simple, and shows the spacecraft from a 3rd person perspective...with an inset showing the trajectory.
The second one is also 3rd person, and shows detailed flight numbers.
Hope you, dear reader (if any) have a better experience waiting for the Quick Time movies to download and play. I found it a bit choppy.
2011/02/19
The Solar System to Scale
Be prepared to do a "little" scrolling....
From Space.com:

Source SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration
From Space.com:
Source SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration
2011/02/17
MESSENGER - One More Month!
One Month Until Mercury Orbit Insertion!
After more than a dozen laps through the inner solar system, NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft will move into orbit around Mercury on March 17, 2011. The durable spacecraft — carrying seven science instruments and fortified against the blistering environs near the Sun — will be the first to orbit the innermost planet.
At 8:45 p.m. EDT, MESSENGER — having pointed its largest thruster very close to the direction of travel — will fire that thruster for nearly 14 minutes, with other thrusters firing for an additional minute, slowing the spacecraft by 862 meters per second (1,929 miles per hour) and consuming 31% of the propellant that the spacecraft carried at launch. Less than 9.5% of the usable propellant at the start of the mission will remain after completing the orbit insertion maneuver, but the spacecraft will still have plenty of propellant for future orbit correction maneuvers.
The orbit insertion will place the spacecraft into an initial orbit about Mercury that has a 200 kilometer (124 mile) minimum altitude and a period of 12 hours. At the time of orbit insertion, MESSENGER will be 46.14 million kilometers (28.67 million miles) from the Sun and 155.06 million kilometers (96.35 million miles) from Earth.
“The journey since launch, more than six and a half years ago, has been a long one,” says MESSENGER Principal Investigator Sean Solomon, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. “But we have rounded the last turn, and the finish line for the mission’s cruise phase is in sight. The team is ready for orbital operations to begin.”
Engineers recently tested the arrayed-antenna configuration that will be used during the Mercury orbit insertion. During the maneuver, MESSENGER’s orientation will be optimized to support the burn, not to support communications with the team on the ground. As a result, the signal home will be weaker than usual. To boost the signal, communications engineers will use four antennas at the Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex — one 70-meter dish and three 34-meter dishes.
“This arrangement is not typical for a maneuver, so we wanted to do a few dry runs before orbit insertion,” says MESSENGER Communications Engineer Dipak Srinivasan, of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md. “We are still analyzing the data, but everything went as expected.”
Since the last deep-space maneuver (DSM) almost a year and a half ago, the primary focus of the team has been on preparing for the orbit insertion maneuver and for orbital operations. Detailed plans have been developed and vetted through an extensive series of meetings ranging from internal peer reviews of each subsystem to formal reviews with external experts assessing overall readiness. Three of the major reviews were dedicated specifically to the activities associated with the MOI maneuver itself.
In addition to taking advantage of planned DSMs to practice aspects of the orbit insertion maneuver, the team has conducted a number of flight tests to characterize key subsystem behavior and to confirm the proper operation of various spacecraft components. Three full-team rehearsals using the hardware simulator have been conducted to practice all activities to be followed during the upcoming maneuver. The first of these exercises mimicked a nominal orbit insertion, and the following two presented anomalies for the team to recognize, analyze, and address.
“Although we feel that the preparations to date – and those scheduled for the next month – have been well thought-out, that the decisions made to define the specific activities were sound, and that the level of review and rehearsal has been more than adequate, we recognize the extraordinary complexity and unique nature of this endeavor,” says APL’s Peter Bedini, MESSENGER’s project manager. “But at this point, four weeks out, we are well positioned for success. The spacecraft is healthy, continues to operate nominally, and is on course to be at the right place at the right time at 8:45 P.M. ET on the evening of March 17.”
For an overview of Mercury Orbit Insertion and planned orbital observations, go online to http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/mer_orbit.html.
2011/02/03
Clyde Space - Good Name!
While browsing Google Reader today, I saw this post on Orbiter-Forum.
Here's the recent news on the company, per the BBC. They are based out of Glasgow, Scotland.
They claim that they are the first space company with an online store.
Here's their logo:
Why they chose the name, in their words:
The only downside to this news is that the name is already TAKEN!
Here's the recent news on the company, per the BBC. They are based out of Glasgow, Scotland.
They claim that they are the first space company with an online store.
Here's their logo:
Why they chose the name, in their words:
Clyde Space is named after the River Clyde, the main river running through Glasgow. At one point in the past, 25% of all of the World's ships were made on the River Clyde; in the future, perhaps the Clyde will be equally successful building spaceships ...
The only downside to this news is that the name is already TAKEN!
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