top | item 42858182

(no title)

hajola | 1 year ago

> How big is the L2 Lagrange point? (i.e., how closely do you need to be for an orbit around L2 to be practical?)

The L2 point doesn't really have size, and even its location isn't stable. It's a mathematical point, and when we say "orbit around L2" then that is not fully true either. The spacecraft are on what's called "halo orbit" - maybe imagine balancing a steel ball (like from a bearing) on a bottle that's sideways, it's probably easier to roll and balance the ball lenghtways of the bottle, than on rolling it sideways. The best analogy I could come up with. You don't want to be too close to the L2 point, as then the orbit would be very short and less stable, think of it as having a smaller bottle - probably harder to balance the steel ball on a smaller bottle than a big one.

> How far away PLATO will be from the James Webb Space Telescope? Probably on the magnitude of hundreds of thousands of kms on average. Interesting question though, hopefully they won't get too close :D

discuss

order

No comments yet.