robertinventor
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Hi everyone, I've been using Orbiter to make screenshots and videos for an article on Joseph Carroll's ingenious artificial gravity experiment.
The way it works is that you tether the Soyuz TMA to its final stage - so after separation, then they remain attached.
So at this point they are still attached.
Then you do a series of boosts, always at the apogee in the southern hemisphere, to generate artificial gravity. Always do that when moving in the direction of the orbit in the tether spin.
This raises the perigee in the northern hemisphere - until eventually it becomes the new apogee. Finally you release the tether at the new apogee, when Soyuz is moving in direction of the orbit around the Cof g again.
This puts the final stage into an immediate re-entry into the Pacific, and sends the Soyuz on to the ISS with exactly the same boost it would have had if all that fuel was used just to go straight to the ISS. So almost no extra fuel is needed, you get a free experiment in artificial gravity lasting 2 days, and get a controlled targeted re-entry of the final stage into the Pacific.
Anyway - I've got some good images and video showing the Soyuz and the final stage. Most of the images come from Orbiter in fact.
But what would be really great would be if there was some way to attach the Soyuz to its final stage and get them spinning around each other within Orbiter.
I tried the TetherMFD but it didn't do anything, or maybe I don't know how to use it. I noticed though that someone says in a comment that it doesn't work on Orbiter 2010.
Can this be done?
It would be great just to create an orbiter video showing the Soyuz attached to its final stage over the Pacific, and both spinning about their common C of G.
Is this possible? Any ideas or thoughts?
Also, since it's such an intriguing mission, at least I think so, maybe others here will as well - I wonder if anyone else here is interested in working on this as a scenario to add to orbiter as a plugin, on top of the Soyuz TMA missions?
I'm very much a novice at Orbiter. Just about figured how to launch to orbit on manual but did those shots using it in automatic mode. It's a steep learning curve, the keyboard shortcuts take some learning and takes some searching to find out how to do things.
So, I'm not sure I'd be able to do it in the near future, the complete scenario. But imagine that some of you here might find it an interesting and not too challenging thing to do.
Here is my article, draft in progress:
JOSEPH CARROLL'S INGENIOUS ARTIFICIAL GRAVITY EXPERIMENT - SOYUZ IN TETHER SPIN - ALMOST NO EXTRA FUEL
Joe Carroll himself is going to talk about his ideas on the Space Show about a week from now.
Sunday, May 25, 1PM PDT, Webinar with Joe Carroll, Drs. Logan and Jurist on partial gravity and more. -Space show newsletter
And here's my original article on Science20 Ingenious Idea: Soyuz Crew in Tether Spin On Way to ISS - For Artificial Gravity - Almost No Extra Fuel
The way it works is that you tether the Soyuz TMA to its final stage - so after separation, then they remain attached.
So at this point they are still attached.
Then you do a series of boosts, always at the apogee in the southern hemisphere, to generate artificial gravity. Always do that when moving in the direction of the orbit in the tether spin.
This raises the perigee in the northern hemisphere - until eventually it becomes the new apogee. Finally you release the tether at the new apogee, when Soyuz is moving in direction of the orbit around the Cof g again.
This puts the final stage into an immediate re-entry into the Pacific, and sends the Soyuz on to the ISS with exactly the same boost it would have had if all that fuel was used just to go straight to the ISS. So almost no extra fuel is needed, you get a free experiment in artificial gravity lasting 2 days, and get a controlled targeted re-entry of the final stage into the Pacific.
Anyway - I've got some good images and video showing the Soyuz and the final stage. Most of the images come from Orbiter in fact.
But what would be really great would be if there was some way to attach the Soyuz to its final stage and get them spinning around each other within Orbiter.
I tried the TetherMFD but it didn't do anything, or maybe I don't know how to use it. I noticed though that someone says in a comment that it doesn't work on Orbiter 2010.
Can this be done?
It would be great just to create an orbiter video showing the Soyuz attached to its final stage over the Pacific, and both spinning about their common C of G.
Is this possible? Any ideas or thoughts?
Also, since it's such an intriguing mission, at least I think so, maybe others here will as well - I wonder if anyone else here is interested in working on this as a scenario to add to orbiter as a plugin, on top of the Soyuz TMA missions?
I'm very much a novice at Orbiter. Just about figured how to launch to orbit on manual but did those shots using it in automatic mode. It's a steep learning curve, the keyboard shortcuts take some learning and takes some searching to find out how to do things.
So, I'm not sure I'd be able to do it in the near future, the complete scenario. But imagine that some of you here might find it an interesting and not too challenging thing to do.
Here is my article, draft in progress:
JOSEPH CARROLL'S INGENIOUS ARTIFICIAL GRAVITY EXPERIMENT - SOYUZ IN TETHER SPIN - ALMOST NO EXTRA FUEL
Joe Carroll himself is going to talk about his ideas on the Space Show about a week from now.
Sunday, May 25, 1PM PDT, Webinar with Joe Carroll, Drs. Logan and Jurist on partial gravity and more. -Space show newsletter
And here's my original article on Science20 Ingenious Idea: Soyuz Crew in Tether Spin On Way to ISS - For Artificial Gravity - Almost No Extra Fuel