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On Jun 23, 9:59 am, "N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\)"
wrote: Dear wrote in message ... Anybody with some ideas on how NASA selected the orbital altitudes above the moon for the Apollo missions? If you go too high, the orbits rapdily become unstable. That is a problem when trying to be a satellite of a satellite... With little/no atmosphere, was it an advantage to make them as low as possible? Yes for orbital stability, no for surface communications purposes. How low can you go? A miss is as good as a mile. A satellite was crashed into the Moon's surface about a year ago, and it was clearing the surface by less than a mile, I think.http://groups.google.com/group/sci.a...f438b76d22065b ... if you do a little digging into SMART-1, your questions should be answered. David A. Smith Actually for manned Apollo missions, the "standard" orbit for the CSM was around 60 nautical miles. For the last three J-mission landings the CSM/LM was placed into an elliptical orbit with a pericynthion of ten miles in order to drop off the LM. By using this low point they increased the fuel efficiency of the LM so that it could land the heavier payload - the Rover and more consumables. As for the orbital mechanics of lunar obit, yes there is no atmosphere to consider. You can make your orbit just low enough to clear the highest mountains. But they discovered tehat the gravitational field of the moon is not consistent. There are "mascons", mass concentrations that cause distortions in orbits, especially low ones. This is what causes orbital decay of lunar satellites. As I recall the mascons were located in mare areas. Low lunar orbits are unstable as a result. Higher orbits are not as susceptible to the mascon's gravitational effects. If I am not correct I am sure that there are some lunar scientists from the Apollo era that can elaborate on this. Matthew Ota I was alive when men walked on the moon. It really happened. But I was just a kid at the time |
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