LEO-lunar transfer

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Revision as of 20:27, 31 August 2006 by RaMan (talk | contribs) (on the way to make it a Random Article. Will do more later)
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So you're in low Earth orbit, in a gassed up Delta-glider. From here you want get to the Moon above. Here's how.

Align orbital planes

First thing you need to do is line up (align) your orbital plane with the Moon's. Bring up the orbital alignment MFD on either screen (Shift+A). Then on that MFD, target (Shift+T) the Moon. This will bring up a display you probably don't understand. There is a circle with two lines on it, and some numbers, as well as a box that says 'kill thrust'.

The line that extends out from the center of the circle in only one direction is your position in your orbit. The longer line that bisects the circle is where your orbit intersects with the orbital plane you're aiming to align with. These are the regions where you want to change your orbital plane. The numbers along the left side of the display indicate how far your orbit is from being aligned with that of the target.

What you do is wait for your position in your orbit to get near one of the orbital intersections mentioned earlier. When this happens, the 'kill thrust' message will be replaced by a flashing 'thrust normal' or 'thrust antinormal'. Follow the directions - use your autopilot to orient your ship toward the normal or antinormal, and then start the engine. You'll notice the Rinc number on the left start to decrease. Your goal is to get this number as close to 0 as possible, because Rinc stands for Relative Inclination - the difference in degrees between your orbit and the target orbit. It may take several burns in different directions to line up. When Rinc is .05 or less you win.

So, you've gotten your orbit aligned - congratulations. You've just turned a 3D equation into a much simpler 2 dimensional one.

Transfer

Now comes the fun part. Bring up the transfer MFD, either in the same screen, or the other one if you like. Target the moon as before. You'll see a circle representing the moon's orbit, and text stating 'no intersect'. This is because your orbital path and the moon's do not, in fact, intersect. Yet.

First thing to do is hit the HTO button. Once you've done this, you press and hold the DV+ button. This will cause a dashed oval to grow out of the point in the middle of the display. You want this dashed oval to just touch the circle of the moon's orbit. When it does, you'll get a whole bunch of new symbology. The yellow dashed line is where the moon will be when you get to the other end of the oval. The green dashed line is the point in your orbit where you should make your ejection (from your present orbit) burn, the solid yellow line is where the moon is now in its orbit, and the grey line is where your proposet trajectory (the dashed oval) intersects with the moon's orbit. What you should do is fiddle with the EJ+ and EJ- buttons to position this grey line over the dashed yellow one. once you've done this, wait until the solid green line (your position in your orbit) is either at or close to the dashed green line. Using the Prograde autopilot mode, make a long burn, watching the transfer screen. A solid green oval representing your actual current orbit will grow out from the center of the circle, and eventually match the dashed proposed orbit. When it does, kill your engines.

Congratulations, you're on your way to the moon. So, a couple days later...

You've arrived! The moon is getting pretty big in the viewscreen. Really big. Too big in fact. Oh dear, we're about to impact the lunar surface at some 17,000 miles per hour. Now what?

Bring up the orbit display in one of your mfd's. Hit the ref (reference) button, and put in 'moon'. this brings up a display of your orbital path around the moon. In the case above, this probably looks like a straight line. What to do now? Switch the HUD to surface mode. theoretically by this point the moon is your primary gravity source, and it should be using it for reference. Bring your nose around so that it is level with the lunar surface (00 on the ladder bars). Fire all engines, and watch the orbit display. It should, ideally, turn into a parabola with a circle inside. You want to continue this burn until the green parabola is entirely outside the grey circle representing the moon. Disaster averted!

There is one final problem. Continuing on this path will cause our ship to slingshot around the moon and off into deep space somewhere. So the final operation in lunar orbit insertion is to wait until near the closest point in your lunar passage, and retrograde burn to circularize your orbit (by watching the orbit MFD). All circular? Congratulations, you're here! One thing I enjoy doing at this point is seeing how low I can continuously orbit the moon without touching. Actually landing at Brighton Beach is an entire tutorial in itself, and outside the scope of this writing.