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Old February 15th 15, 07:56 PM posted to sci.space.station,sci.space.policy
Niklas Holsti
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Posts: 168
Default Orbital mechanics question DSCOVER L1 orbit

On 15-02-15 17:15 , Jeff Findley wrote:
In article om,
says...

On 15-02-14 04:04, someone wrote:

URL:
http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2025669167_apxscideepspaceobservatory.html


Based on that article, stage 2 left DSCOVR in a elliptical orbit around
earth, with 37° inclination and 1,2 milion km * 187km orbit.

Would it be correct to state that L1 is an orbit around the sun, but at
a speed that matches Earth's orbit around the sun despite being at a
lower orbit than the Earth, which is made possible by Earth's gravity
compensating. ?


It looks like an orbit around the sun, but it's not.


It is, in the geometrical sense: the L1 locus follows an (approximately)
closed, nearly circular path with the Sun close to its centre. Orbital
period = 1 Earth year.

It's correct to
state that L1 is the location in space where the gravitational forces on
a satellite from the sun and the earth cancel out.


No, if the forces cancelled, then an object placed in L1 would move in a
straight-line path. Instead, it follows an orbit around the Sun, which
means that there is a net gravitational acceleration towards the Sun.

As JF Mezei said, at L1 the gravitational attraction between the Earth
and the satellite counteracts not all, but just enough of the
gravitational attraction between the Sun and the satellite to increase
the orbital period of the satellite from its sans-Earth value (less than
one year) to one year, thus making it keep pace with the Earth.

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Niklas Holsti
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