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Geometers Engineer New Tools to Wrangle Spacecraft Orbits

62 pointsby piotrkaminskiabout 1 year ago

3 comments

terramarsabout 1 year ago
This is really cool research, but to say &quot;symplectic geometry, an abstract field of math that is generally far removed from messy real-world details&quot; in the context of orbit planning is a gross mischaracterization. All serious solar system dynamics research happens in phase space not cartesian space, which means symplectic geometry - that is the orbital parameters are integrated instead of x,y,z. This amusingly named website has a fairly approachable description of what&#x27;s happening : <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wiki.tfes.org&#x2F;Symplectic_Integrators" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wiki.tfes.org&#x2F;Symplectic_Integrators</a>
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clarkmoodyabout 1 year ago
The term &quot;Geometers&quot; makes me think of Neal Stephenson&#x27;s <i>Anathem</i>, which is just as will, since the article is about advanced orbits.
nuc1e0nabout 1 year ago
The picture at the start of the article looks like Lissajous patterns. And sure enough Lissajous orbits around lagrange points are a thing according to wikipedia.