SP3CoordinateHermiteInterpolator.java
/* Copyright 2002-2024 Luc Maisonobe
* Licensed to CS GROUP (CS) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* CS licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.orekit.files.sp3;
import java.util.stream.Stream;
import org.hipparchus.analysis.interpolation.HermiteInterpolator;
import org.hipparchus.geometry.euclidean.threed.Vector3D;
import org.orekit.time.AbsoluteDate;
import org.orekit.time.AbstractTimeInterpolator;
/** Interpolator for {@link SP3Coordinate SP3 coordinates}.
* <p>
* As this implementation of interpolation is polynomial, it should be used only with small number of interpolation points
* (about 10-20 points) in order to avoid <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%27s_phenomenon">Runge's phenomenon</a>
* and numerical problems (including NaN appearing).
*
* @author Luc Maisonobe
* @see HermiteInterpolator
* @see SP3Coordinate
* @since 12.0
*/
public class SP3CoordinateHermiteInterpolator extends AbstractTimeInterpolator<SP3Coordinate> {
/** Flag for using velocity and clock rate. */
private final boolean useRates;
/**
* Constructor.
* <p>
* As this implementation of interpolation is polynomial, it should be used only with small number of interpolation
* points (about 10-20 points) in order to avoid <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runge%27s_phenomenon">Runge's
* phenomenon</a> and numerical problems (including NaN appearing).
* </p>
*
* @param interpolationPoints number of interpolation points
* @param extrapolationThreshold extrapolation threshold beyond which the propagation will fail
* @param useRates if true, use velocity and clock rates for interpolation
*/
public SP3CoordinateHermiteInterpolator(final int interpolationPoints,
final double extrapolationThreshold,
final boolean useRates) {
super(interpolationPoints, extrapolationThreshold);
this.useRates = useRates;
}
/**
* {@inheritDoc}
* <p>
* The interpolated instance is created by polynomial Hermite interpolation ensuring velocity remains the exact
* derivative of position.
* <p>
* Note that even if first time derivatives (velocities) from sample can be ignored, the interpolated instance always
* includes interpolated derivatives. This feature can be used explicitly to compute these derivatives when it would be
* too complex to compute them from an analytical formula: just compute a few sample points from the explicit formula and
* set the derivatives to zero in these sample points, then use interpolation to add derivatives consistent with the
* positions.
*/
@Override
protected SP3Coordinate interpolate(final InterpolationData interpolationData) {
// Get date
final AbsoluteDate date = interpolationData.getInterpolationDate();
// Convert sample to stream
final Stream<SP3Coordinate> sample = interpolationData.getNeighborList().stream();
// Set up an interpolator taking derivatives into account
final HermiteInterpolator interpolator = new HermiteInterpolator();
// Add sample points
if (useRates) {
// populate sample with position, clock, velocity and clock rate data
sample.forEach(c -> {
interpolator.addSamplePoint(c.getDate().durationFrom(date),
new double[] {
c.getPosition().getX(),
c.getPosition().getY(),
c.getPosition().getZ(),
c.getClockCorrection(),
},
new double[] {
c.getVelocity().getX(),
c.getVelocity().getY(),
c.getVelocity().getZ(),
c.getClockRateChange(),
});
});
} else {
// populate sample with position and clock data, ignoring velocity and clock rate
sample.forEach(c -> {
interpolator.addSamplePoint(c.getDate().durationFrom(date),
new double[] {
c.getPosition().getX(),
c.getPosition().getY(),
c.getPosition().getZ(),
c.getClockCorrection(),
});
});
}
// Interpolate
final double[][] interpolated = interpolator.derivatives(0.0, 1);
// Build a new interpolated instance
return new SP3Coordinate(date,
new Vector3D(interpolated[0][0], interpolated[0][1], interpolated[0][2]), null,
new Vector3D(interpolated[1][0], interpolated[1][1], interpolated[1][2]), null,
interpolated[0][3], Double.NaN,
interpolated[1][3], Double.NaN,
false, false, false, false);
}
}