OrbiterWiki:Random tutorial

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Revision as of 21:53, 20 September 2006 by Urwumpe (talk | contribs) (Added it to the general list of options...)
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Random articles displayed on the Main Page are selected from the following list. More popular articles should be given more chance to be visible, so each user is allowed to nominate their list of articles worthy of being on the main page. A user may not edit other users' nominations or nominate an addon more than once. Please obey the rules or your nominations will be removed.

Note that you must be a registered user to edit this list.

List

These are all the articles which have a precis and can be voted on by users. The articles are listed alphabetically.

FreeCompilerSetupThumb.png

Free Compiler Setup. Many Orbiter add-ons come with source code which can be compiled using the free Visual Studio. However, there are a few things that need to be done to make Orbiter projects compile in it. This tutorial goes through the steps necessary to configure Visual Studio for use with Orbiter. (More...)


MoonThumbTransparent.png

LEO-lunar transfer tutorial. "... Congratulations, you're on your way to the Moon. So, a couple of 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?" (More...)


Transfer orbit example

In spaceflight, rendezvous refers to the event in which two spacecraft meet. This can occur in space or on the surface of a celestial body.

A rendezvous usually takes place in orbit, e.g. when spacecrafts are travelling to a space station. If two spacecraft are close enough to each other (< 300m) and travel in similar orbits they are said to rendezvous. In such a situation, both spacecraft can stay close to the space station with minimal corrections. (More...)


Example

Below is an example of a random article generated by the list:


Transfer orbit example

In spaceflight, rendezvous refers to the event in which two spacecraft meet. This can occur in space or on the surface of a celestial body.

A rendezvous usually takes place in orbit, e.g. when spacecrafts are travelling to a space station. If two spacecraft are close enough to each other (< 300m) and travel in similar orbits they are said to rendezvous. In such a situation, both spacecraft can stay close to the space station with minimal corrections. (More...)