On Fri, Sep 23, 2016 at 01:59:16PM +1000, Russell Coker via luv-main wrote:
>Is there a good free orbital simulator for Linux?
>
>I don't want a game like KSP but a simulation of orbits without much need for 
>fancy graphics.
>
>I am wondering what the orbit of a ring would be like (EG a Dyson ring) and 
>whether it's plausible to make such a ring or whether a set of disconnected 
>sattelites in the same orbit is required.

is there such a thing as a Dyson ring? I thought it was a Niven ring, as
per Ringworld, Ringworld Engineers etc. and as (fans of) those books
pointed out, rings are unstable no matter what.

a full Dyson sphere is neutrally/meta stable, but no idea how you'd
actually construct it in a stable manner... likely someone has thought
about it though!

short version is that gravity is a harsh mistress, often chaotic, and
hard to do right over long timescales. do you think the solar system 
is stable? you are wrong. satellites? nope. but depends upon what
timescales they drift/resonate.

I mostly know about high N N-body codes, but I have a symplectic toy
low N multi-timestep python code that I wrote somewhere. there are probably
high performance (giga-year) public symplectic low N codes out there too.

BTW all mine are collisionless. quite different to David Zuccaro's
(intriguing - asteroid field?) collisional code.

cheers,
robin

ObLinux: some sats probably run linux? :)
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