(no title)
throwaway8503 | 2 years ago
GOCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_Field_and_Steady-State...
It's a gravity survey satellite. They get better measurements if they fly closer to the earth, so there's a motivation to lower the orbit. GOCE flies so low that it needs to take aerodynamics into account, so it is sleek, like an aircraft.*
* It is, of course, actually an aircraft, like all satellites, to some degree, at least in the layman's definition of the word.
ISL|2 years ago
When I think of pretty gravity experiments, there are many, as the form must follow the function and gravity is geometry.
I'm particularly partial to the laser-ranging satellites:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LAGEOS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LARES_(satellite)
LARES is particularly cool, as it is (and may forever be) the densest object of its mass in the solar system. As so many gravity experiments go, systematic uncertainties are more-important than raw signal, though, so LARES 2 is composed of nickel instead of tungsten. It'll still be quite a day when LARES 1 re-enters; it'd be quite a sight to see.
andyjohnson0|2 years ago
sleepytimetea|2 years ago
unknown|2 years ago
[deleted]
throwaway8503|2 years ago
atoav|2 years ago
They use the fact that higher densities of gravity on the earth below accelerate one sattelite before the other. So the way they measure gravity is by very accuratly measuring the fluctuations in the distances of the sattelites.
This is a feat in itself, the sattelites are 200 km apart and the fluctuations are on the scale of the strength of a hair.
Maybe there are better more precise ways of measuring local gravity from space, but this is just so clever.
orbital-decay|2 years ago
Aircraft use the surrounding air as support to counter the gravity. While lift has been measured for GOCE at different angles of attack, it never used it to stay at its altitude; the "wings" were just solar panels to feed the power-hungry engine and stabilize the attitude. At GOCE operating altitudes, the air is sparse, Knudsen number is high, and the aerodynamics differ quite a bit. It wasn't an aircraft, it was a "satelloid", an old idea that got implemented.
edrxty|2 years ago
https://eoi.space/
2-718-281-828|2 years ago
doesn't the layman definition of "aircraft" require air?
adrianmonk|2 years ago
anigbrowl|2 years ago
piceas|2 years ago
https://www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Search/(offset)/100/(sort...
e.g. https://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/images/esa_multimedia/im...
elephant81|2 years ago
boffinAudio|2 years ago
hackernewds|2 years ago
great compliment for Ferrari!
wkat4242|2 years ago
Can't be much at 250km though.
rob74|2 years ago
canadianfella|2 years ago
[deleted]