Editing S/2000 (90) 1

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 1: Line 1:
{| cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" style="margin:25px 0 0 10px; border:3px solid lightsteelblue;width:250px; font-size:90%; font-family:'Arial','Helvetica'; float: right; clear: right;"Template in Orbiter"
+
#REDIRECT [[90 Antiope]]
!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2" align="center" |S/2000 (90) 1
 
|-
 
|colspan="2" align="center"|[[Image:S2000901-Antiopezip-Orbiter2003P2.jpg|240px]]
 
|-
 
|colspan="2" align="center"|'''S/2000 (90) 1 from ''Antiope.zip'' in Orbiter 2002P3'''
 
|-
 
!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Designation
 
|-
 
|Name||align="right"|S/2000 (90) 1
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Reference body||align="right" width="30%"|[[Antiope]]
 
|-
 
!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Planetary mean orbits
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Epoch||align="right" width="50%"|2003.441
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Semimajor axis (a)||align="right" width="50%"|85000 m
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Eccentricity (e)||align="right" width="30%"|0
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Inclination (i)||align="right" width="30%"|0° <br> (0 radian)
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Longitude of the ascending node (LAN, ☊)||align="right" width="30%"|0° <br> (0 radian)
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Longitude of periapsis (ϖ)||align="right" width="30%"|0° <br> (0 radian)
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Mean longitude (L)||align="right" width="30%"|180° <br> (3.141592653 radian)
 
|-
 
!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Selected physical parameters
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Mean radius||align="right" width="30%"|42500 km
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Mass||align="right" width="30%"|4.1×10<sup>3</sup> kg
 
|-
 
!bgcolor="lightsteelblue" colspan="2"|Rotation elements
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|SidRotPeriod||align="right" width="30%"|59432 seconds (16.509 hours)
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|SidRotOffset||align="right" width="30%"|0
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Obliqutiy||align="right" width="30%"|0
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|LAN||align="right" width="30%"|0
 
|-
 
|width="30%"|Note||align="right" width="30%"|*Elements given are from S2000 90 1.cfg (Antiope.zip)
 
|}
 
 
 
'''90 Antiope'''is a double asteroid with [[S/2000 (90) 1]] in the main asteroid belt between [[Mars]] and [[Jupiter]], and was discovered on 1 October 1866 by [[w:Robert Luther|Robert Luther]]. The name comes from [[w:Greek mythology|Greek mythology]]. 90 Antiope was considered a single body until August 2000 when it was discovered to be two almost identical bodies, the mass differing by less than 2.5%. Antiope is now attributed to the larger body and the smaller body is desgnated as S/2000 (90) 1.
 
 
 
== Antiope in Orbiter ==
 
'''90 Antiope''' was first introduced with the release of MainBeltAsteroids051403.zip in May 2003. Since Orbiter is not written for two bodies revolving about a gravity center, S/2000 (90) 1 is configured to revolve as a standard satellite about Antiope in this release.
 
 
 
In the release of ''Antiope.zip'' by ''Bluefrog'' in January 2003, 90 Antiope and S2000 90 1 were modeled to orbit around a common gravity center by creating a ficticious body "Antiope" with the solar orbital parameters of the twin body system as given in the table to the right, but, the fictitious body has a radius of 4.25 meters, mass of 10.325×10<sup>16</sup> kg, and was not given any visuals. 90 Antiope and S2000 90 1 were modeled as satellites of the fictitious body, orbiting each at 85000 km from Antiope each with the same mass, radius, and rotation periods.
 
 
 
Sol.cfg is listed like this, 'Planet5' being whatever planet number you assign in your file:<br>
 
Planet5 = Antiope<br>
 
Antiope:Moon1 = 90 Antiope<br>
 
Antiope:Moon2 = S2000 90 1
 
 
 
NOTICE TO PILOTS: The Antiope center body is invisible, but has a hard surface 4.25 meters in radius. Do be very careful when flying between the bodies as not to crash into Antiope.
 
 
 
Note that the landing surface of 90 Antiope as given in the config file is spherical, but the visual of these bodies are not, if you land, you will likely be above or below the visual surface.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
 
|colspan="8"|<center>'''Orbiter versions and add-ons which include S/2000 (90) 1'''</center>
 
|-
 
!Add-on!!Source!!Version!!Author!!Type!!Release Date!!Compatibility!!Wiki article
 
|-
 
|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/antiope.3037/ Antiope]||O-F Resources||2004-01-24||Bluefrog||Scenery||24 January 2004||||
 
|-
 
|[https://www.orbiter-forum.com/resources/main-belt-asteroids-v1-0.1435/ Main Belt Asteroids v1.0]||O-F Resources||v1.0||Unknown OHM Addon Developer||Scenery||14 May 2003||||
 
|}
 
== See also ==
 
[[w:90 Antiope|90 Antiope and S/2000 (90) 1]] at [[w:Wikipedia|Wikipedia]]
 
 
 
== Gallery ==
 
<gallery widths="200" heights="200">
 
S2000901-MainBeltAsteroidszip.jpg|<center>S/2000 Z(90) 1 in Orbiter 2002P3 from ''MainBeltAsteroids051403.zip''</center>
 
90AntiopeS2000901-MainBeltAsteroidszip.jpg|<center>S/2000 (90) 1 (left) and 90 Antiope (right) in Orbiter 2002P3 from ''MainBeltAsteroids051403.zip''</center>
 
S2000901-Antiopezip-Orbiter2003P2.jpg|<center>S/2000 (90) 1 from ''Antiope.zip'' in Orbiter 2003P2</center>
 
90Antiope-S2000901-Antiopezip-Orbiter2003P2.jpg|<center>90 Antiope (left) and S/2000 (90) 1 from (right) ''Antiope.zip'' in Orbiter 2003P2</center>
 
The Antiope Doublet - Eso0718b.png|<center>[[w:Very Large Telescope|Very Large Telescope]] images of 90 Antiope and S/2000 (90) 1 in 2004</center>
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
{{SolarSystem}}
 
 
 
{{Stub}}
 
 
 
[[Category:Articles|S/2000 (90) 1]]
 
[[Category:Celestial bodies|S/2000 (90) 1]]
 
[[Category:Solar System|S/2000 (90) 1]]
 
[[Category:Main Belt Asteroids|S/2000 (90) 1]]
 

Please note that all contributions to OrbiterWiki are considered to be released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.2 (see OrbiterWiki:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following hCaptcha:

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)

Templates used on this page: