public class CartesianOrbit extends Orbit
The parameters used internally are the cartesian coordinates:
PVCoordinates
.
Note that the implementation of this class delegates all non-cartesian related
computations (getA()
, getEquinoctialEx()
, ...) to an underlying
instance of the EquinoctialOrbit
class. This implies that using this class
only for analytical computations which are always based on non-cartesian
parameters is perfectly possible but somewhat sub-optimal.
The instance CartesianOrbit
is guaranteed to be immutable.
Orbit
,
KeplerianOrbit
,
CircularOrbit
,
EquinoctialOrbit
,
Serialized FormConstructor and Description |
---|
CartesianOrbit(Orbit op)
Constructor from any kind of orbital parameters.
|
CartesianOrbit(PVCoordinates pvaCoordinates,
Frame frame,
AbsoluteDate date,
double mu)
Constructor from Cartesian parameters.
|
CartesianOrbit(TimeStampedPVCoordinates pvaCoordinates,
Frame frame,
double mu)
Constructor from Cartesian parameters.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
addKeplerContribution(PositionAngle type,
double gm,
double[] pDot)
Add the contribution of the Keplerian motion to parameters derivatives
|
protected double[][] |
computeJacobianEccentricWrtCartesian()
Compute the Jacobian of the orbital parameters with eccentric angle with respect to the Cartesian parameters.
|
protected double[][] |
computeJacobianMeanWrtCartesian()
Compute the Jacobian of the orbital parameters with mean angle with respect to the Cartesian parameters.
|
protected double[][] |
computeJacobianTrueWrtCartesian()
Compute the Jacobian of the orbital parameters with true angle with respect to the Cartesian parameters.
|
double |
getA()
Get the semi-major axis.
|
double |
getE()
Get the eccentricity.
|
double |
getEquinoctialEx()
Get the first component of the equinoctial eccentricity vector.
|
double |
getEquinoctialEy()
Get the second component of the equinoctial eccentricity vector.
|
double |
getHx()
Get the first component of the inclination vector.
|
double |
getHy()
Get the second component of the inclination vector.
|
double |
getI()
Get the inclination.
|
void |
getJacobianWrtCartesian(PositionAngle type,
double[][] jacobian)
Compute the Jacobian of the orbital parameters with respect to the Cartesian parameters.
|
double |
getLE()
Get the eccentric longitude argument.
|
double |
getLM()
Get the mean longitude argument.
|
double |
getLv()
Get the true longitude argument.
|
OrbitType |
getType()
Get the orbit type.
|
protected TimeStampedPVCoordinates |
initPVCoordinates()
Compute the position/velocity coordinates from the canonical parameters.
|
CartesianOrbit |
interpolate(AbsoluteDate date,
Collection<Orbit> sample)
Get an interpolated instance.
|
CartesianOrbit |
shiftedBy(double dt)
Get a time-shifted orbit.
|
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of this Orbit object.
|
fillHalfRow, fillHalfRow, fillHalfRow, fillHalfRow, fillHalfRow, fillHalfRow, getDate, getFrame, getJacobianWrtParameters, getKeplerianMeanMotion, getKeplerianPeriod, getMu, getPVCoordinates, getPVCoordinates, getPVCoordinates
public CartesianOrbit(TimeStampedPVCoordinates pvaCoordinates, Frame frame, double mu) throws IllegalArgumentException
The acceleration provided in pvCoordinates
is accessible using
Orbit.getPVCoordinates()
and Orbit.getPVCoordinates(Frame)
. All other methods
use mu
and the position to compute the acceleration, including
shiftedBy(double)
and Orbit.getPVCoordinates(AbsoluteDate, Frame)
.
pvaCoordinates
- the position, velocity and acceleration of the satellite.frame
- the frame in which the PVCoordinates
are defined
(must be a pseudo-inertial frame
)mu
- central attraction coefficient (m³/s²)IllegalArgumentException
- if frame is not a pseudo-inertial frame
public CartesianOrbit(PVCoordinates pvaCoordinates, Frame frame, AbsoluteDate date, double mu) throws IllegalArgumentException
The acceleration provided in pvCoordinates
is accessible using
Orbit.getPVCoordinates()
and Orbit.getPVCoordinates(Frame)
. All other methods
use mu
and the position to compute the acceleration, including
shiftedBy(double)
and Orbit.getPVCoordinates(AbsoluteDate, Frame)
.
pvaCoordinates
- the position and velocity of the satellite.frame
- the frame in which the PVCoordinates
are defined
(must be a pseudo-inertial frame
)date
- date of the orbital parametersmu
- central attraction coefficient (m³/s²)IllegalArgumentException
- if frame is not a pseudo-inertial frame
public CartesianOrbit(Orbit op)
op
- orbital parameters to copypublic OrbitType getType()
public double getA()
Note that the semi-major axis is considered negative for hyperbolic orbits.
public double getE()
public double getI()
public double getEquinoctialEx()
getEquinoctialEx
in class Orbit
public double getEquinoctialEy()
getEquinoctialEy
in class Orbit
public double getHx()
public double getHy()
public double getLv()
public double getLE()
public double getLM()
protected TimeStampedPVCoordinates initPVCoordinates()
initPVCoordinates
in class Orbit
public CartesianOrbit shiftedBy(double dt)
The orbit can be slightly shifted to close dates. This shift is based on a simple keplerian model. It is not intended as a replacement for proper orbit and attitude propagation but should be sufficient for small time shifts or coarse accuracy.
shiftedBy
in interface TimeShiftable<Orbit>
shiftedBy
in class Orbit
dt
- time shift in secondspublic CartesianOrbit interpolate(AbsoluteDate date, Collection<Orbit> sample)
Note that the state of the current instance may not be used in the interpolation process, only its type and non interpolable fields are used (for example central attraction coefficient or frame when interpolating orbits). The interpolable fields taken into account are taken only from the states of the sample points. So if the state of the instance must be used, the instance should be included in the sample points.
Note that this method is designed for small samples only (say up to about 10-20 points) so it can be implemented using polynomial interpolation (typically Hermite interpolation). Using too much points may induce Runge's phenomenon and numerical problems (including NaN appearing).
The interpolated instance is created by polynomial Hermite interpolation ensuring velocity remains the exact derivative of position.
As this implementation of interpolation is polynomial, it should be used only with small samples (about 10-20 points) in order to avoid Runge's phenomenon and numerical problems (including NaN appearing).
If orbit interpolation on large samples is needed, using the Ephemeris
class is a better way than using this
low-level interpolation. The Ephemeris class automatically handles selection of
a neighboring sub-sample with a predefined number of point from a large global sample
in a thread-safe way.
date
- interpolation datesample
- sample points on which interpolation should be donepublic void getJacobianWrtCartesian(PositionAngle type, double[][] jacobian)
Orbit
Element jacobian[i][j]
is the derivative of parameter i of the orbit with
respect to Cartesian coordinate j. This means each row corresponds to one orbital parameter
whereas columns 0 to 5 correspond to the Cartesian coordinates x, y, z, xDot, yDot and zDot.
getJacobianWrtCartesian
in class Orbit
type
- type of the position angle to usejacobian
- placeholder 6x6 (or larger) matrix to be filled with the Jacobian, if matrix
is larger than 6x6, only the 6x6 upper left corner will be modifiedprotected double[][] computeJacobianMeanWrtCartesian()
Orbit
Element jacobian[i][j]
is the derivative of parameter i of the orbit with
respect to Cartesian coordinate j. This means each row correspond to one orbital parameter
whereas columns 0 to 5 correspond to the Cartesian coordinates x, y, z, xDot, yDot and zDot.
computeJacobianMeanWrtCartesian
in class Orbit
Orbit.computeJacobianEccentricWrtCartesian()
,
Orbit.computeJacobianTrueWrtCartesian()
protected double[][] computeJacobianEccentricWrtCartesian()
Orbit
Element jacobian[i][j]
is the derivative of parameter i of the orbit with
respect to Cartesian coordinate j. This means each row correspond to one orbital parameter
whereas columns 0 to 5 correspond to the Cartesian coordinates x, y, z, xDot, yDot and zDot.
computeJacobianEccentricWrtCartesian
in class Orbit
Orbit.computeJacobianMeanWrtCartesian()
,
Orbit.computeJacobianTrueWrtCartesian()
protected double[][] computeJacobianTrueWrtCartesian()
Orbit
Element jacobian[i][j]
is the derivative of parameter i of the orbit with
respect to Cartesian coordinate j. This means each row correspond to one orbital parameter
whereas columns 0 to 5 correspond to the Cartesian coordinates x, y, z, xDot, yDot and zDot.
computeJacobianTrueWrtCartesian
in class Orbit
Orbit.computeJacobianMeanWrtCartesian()
,
Orbit.computeJacobianEccentricWrtCartesian()
public void addKeplerContribution(PositionAngle type, double gm, double[] pDot)
This method is used by integration-based propagators to evaluate the part of Keplerian motion to evolution of the orbital state.
addKeplerContribution
in class Orbit
type
- type of the position angle in the stategm
- attraction coefficient to usepDot
- array containing orbital state derivatives to update (the Keplerian
part must be added to the array components, as the array may already
contain some non-zero elements corresponding to non-Keplerian parts)Copyright © 2002-2015 CS Systèmes d'information. All rights reserved.