General Question Simulation to Real Life NASA Comparison II

PaulG

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2008
Messages
159
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Ok, thank you all who answered and posted in http://orbiter-forum.com/showthread.php?t=5744 it was quite helpful.

I can now get into orbit perfectly, onto the "onramp to the ISS". In fact, because of all the posts, its the 2nd easiest thing for me to do! Landing the shuttle is also a snap now.

But my next question is this, HOW does NASA get the shuttle to meet up with the ISS? Let me just say, I know how to approach and dock, I do it quite easily with DG. My question, is simply how does NASA do it with the shuttle?

I have seen the tutorial, but here is the problem, the one I have seen happens to have both the node AND the ISS over the shuttle position. Most of the time this isn't the case. In the most recent shuttle mission, the shuttle launched far away from the position of the ISS.

So, I get into orbit with a MECO at approximately 40km PeA and 240km ApA. Is this the altitude that the real shuttle reaches?

So, then, prograde level to bring PeA up. But, I'm ahead of the ISS so I need to slow down. I know how to do that, increase the orbital diameter...and wait.

So, what does the real shuttle bring its orbit to?

Thanks,
Paul
 

Tommy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2008
Messages
2,019
Reaction score
86
Points
48
Location
Here and now
I think the shuttle stays in the lower orbit and catches up to the ISS. It can take a few days, but the shuttle doesn't have enough delta-v to go to a higher orbit to let the ISS catch up. I seem to recall that some shuttle missions have had rendevous five days or more after launch for this reason.
 

Arrowstar

Probenaut
Addon Developer
Joined
May 23, 2008
Messages
1,785
Reaction score
0
Points
36
From what I understand, the orbiter periodically performs a burn to slowly raise the orbit of the orbiter to match that of the ISS and thus A) arrive at the ISS, and B) arrive at the ISS slowly enough where you can stop. :)
 

tblaxland

O-F Administrator
Administrator
Addon Developer
Webmaster
Joined
Jan 1, 2008
Messages
7,320
Reaction score
25
Points
113
Location
Sydney, Australia
So, I get into orbit with a MECO at approximately 40km PeA and 240km ApA. Is this the altitude that the real shuttle reaches?
Pretty close to it.

So, then, prograde level to bring PeA up. But, I'm ahead of the ISS so I need to slow down. I know how to do that, increase the orbital diameter...and wait.

So, what does the real shuttle bring its orbit to?
Roughly circular to begin with and then it is slowly raised over the course of a couple of days so that it gradually matches the station's orbit. But it always stays below the stations orbit and it just waits until it catches up the station from behind.
 

PaulG

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2008
Messages
159
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Thanks. So it brings the orbit to about 240k PeA 240 ApA?

I tried this out last night and it worked well. Basically, I held this orbit until I was starting to get close to the ISS. Then, I raised ApA to the ISS altitude. About 3-4 orbits out, I started to increase PeA to slow down my speed (match ISS). At that point, a rendezvous was pretty simple with low dV and decent distance.

I guess I was thrown off by the fact it took over 200k seconds....which is about 2 days anyway.


Thanks!
 

Urwumpe

Not funny anymore
Addon Developer
Donator
Joined
Feb 6, 2008
Messages
37,617
Reaction score
2,337
Points
203
Location
Wolfsburg
Preferred Pronouns
Sire
Well, you should also learn the sense behind the NASA maneuvers The Shuttle does more maneuvers than minimal needed, for making the calculations of following maneuvers simpler and reducing the effect of inevitable measurement errors.

http://www.shuttlepresskit.com/STS-88/REF54.htm
 

ar81

Active member
Joined
Jun 19, 2008
Messages
2,350
Reaction score
3
Points
38
Location
Costa Rica
Website
www.orbithangar.com
Imagine that ISS orbit is passing on top of you.
You throw a stone called "space shuttle" so it reaches ISS.
You have almost no plane alignment because it is very fuel expensive.
Shuttle travel below station orbit to reach it, using third law of Kepler, AFAIK.
 

PaulG

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2008
Messages
159
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Yes, I know. Question was, how does the shuttle do it in real life. Got the answers above, thanks.
 

PaulG

New member
Joined
Sep 12, 2008
Messages
159
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Thanks, this is quite helpful. I was on nasa's site reading the chronology of the last flight and saw many of these terms, but didn't know what they meant.

Thanks again for the comments!
Paul

Well, you should also learn the sense behind the NASA maneuvers The Shuttle does more maneuvers than minimal needed, for making the calculations of following maneuvers simpler and reducing the effect of inevitable measurement errors.

http://www.shuttlepresskit.com/STS-88/REF54.htm
 
Top