Aitne
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Aitne (Jupiter XXXI, S/2001 J 11) is a retrograde satellite of Jupiter. It was discovered by Scott Sheppard et al at the Mauna Kea Observatories in Hawaii in December 2001. It is named for Aetna, one of a daughter of Uranus in Greek mythology.
Aitne in Orbiter
Aitne was first introduced into Orbiter with the add-on jupiter_v.zip in August 2003. Note that Aitne is provided by the add-on as S/2001-J 11. To simulate it as Aitne, the following changes need to be made.
- File:S2001_J11.cfg:
- change the filename to Aitne.cfg
- change the name in the comment line in the top line to Aitne (S/2001-J11, Jupiter)
- line 3, change NAME = to Aitne
- Last line, change the name of Base1 = to Aitne
- File:S2000J11-Station.cfg
- change the filename to Aitne-station.cfg
- Line 3, change the name to Aitne-Station
- File:Jupiter_S2001J11.scn
- change the filename to Jupiter-Aitne.scn
- Line 2, change S2000J11 Station to Aitne Station
- Find the GL-01 ship, change STATUS Landed S2001-J11 to Landed Aitne
- Change BASE S2001J11-Station:1 to Aitne-Station:1
- File:S2001-J11.tex, change filename to Aitne.tex
- File:S2001-J11M.BMP, change filename to AitneM.BMP
Add-on | Source | Version | Author | Type | Release Date | Compatibility | Wiki article |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Outer Planets 060929 Base | AVSIM | Rolf Keibel Carl Romanik Tony Dunn |
Scenery | 30 September 2006 | Orbiter 2006-P1 | ||
The Outer Planets 050125 | AVSIM | 050125 | Rolf Keibel Tony Dunn |
Scenery | 26 January 2005 | Orbiter 2005-P1 | |
Jupiter V | AVSIM | Rolf Keibel | Scenery | 17 August 2003 |
See also
Gallery
edit The Solar System | |
---|---|
Central star |
Sun (Sol) |
Planets |
Mercury - Venus - Earth - Mars - Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune |
Natural satellites |
Moon - Phobos - Deimos - Io - Europa - Ganymede - Titan - more... |
Add-ons |
Planets - Dwarf Planets - Small objects - Natural satellites - Alternative star systems |
This natural satellite related article is a stub. You can help Orbiterwiki by expanding it.
|