View Full Version : Textbook on Numerical Celestial Mechanics
Forum,
I'm seeking for a good textbook on numerical celestial mechanics. My current level of proficiency is:
1- understanding of classical mechanics is at the level of Goldstein's textbook
2- understanding of numerical analysis is at the level that I can easily pick up an algorithm from the "numerical recipes" and rewrite it in my preferred language(s)
Virtually all of the books I've seen so far do not fit my requirements for one or more of the following reasons:
1- too introductory (e.g., start explaining Newton's laws)
2- no numerical approach
3- focused on other applications (e.g., satellite control)
Of course, a cheap textbook would be appreciated ... ;-)
Integral
May1-04, 04:49 PM
You may need to find a good Numerical Methods book and then apply the general methods to Celestial Mechanics.
I find Elementary Numerical Analysis by Conte and de Boor very useful. Also the 2 volume set A Survey of Numerical Mathematics by Young and Gregory is good.
Integral,
thanks for you reply. However, I understand that Celestial Mechanics has some peculiar idiosyncracies (long integration time, need to conserve energy, precision balancing between numerical integration and function evaluation) that seem to require a very specialized approach.
From you reply I understand that I was not very clear on my background: I have some years experience in technical/scientific computing so an introductory text on Numerical Analysis is likely to be of little use. But'll be glad to have a look at the books you reference.
Integral
May2-04, 02:41 AM
Neither of those texts are a "recipe" style books. I used them in grad level Numerical Analysis Math courses, I believe that this differers from a CS course in that a large emphasis is placed on understanding the inherent errors. If you cannot find a canned set of recipes to do what you need. These books may be of some help in designing your own programs. Though it may not be easy to dig out the information you need.
Hi Coelum,
It's not cheap, but this (http://www.talkroot.com/cgi-bin/shop-item_id-1881883124-search_type-AsinSearch-locale-us.html) is the book which is used in my school for two semesters of orbital mechanics. It has quite a few pseudocode algorithms for various topics, and covers pretty much any topic you can think of.
Downside is: It's poorly organized, IMO. It has everything, but needs an editor badly.
remcook
May25-04, 02:30 PM
what do you want to know?
modelling an orbit is just a matter of integrating some equations. one can easily make numerical equations from written ones.
or are there other things you want to do?
I liked A.D. Dubyago's THE DETERMINATION OF ORBITS, translated from the Russian by the Rand Corporation. The Method of Gauss to determine an orbit by three angle-only observations is in Chapter Five.
Jerry Abbott
I liked A.D. Dubyago's THE DETERMINATION OF ORBITS, translated from the Russian by the Rand Corporation. The Method of Gauss to determine an orbit by three angle-only observations is in Chapter Five.
Jerry Abbott
Here's my solution to the ephemeris problem. Yahoo Answers staff didn't like it, but it's a correct general solution with a worked example for Jupiter's position on a given date.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/15453.html
Here's a BASIC program I wrote (with double precision) to evolve a heliocentric state vector with a small time increment for a given period of time. It's basically a numerical check on a two-body Keplerian solution for my transfer orbit procedure.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/15275.html
Hyperbolic transfer orbit calculation.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/15054.html
Predicting lunar eclipses.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/13341.html
Determining an orbit with three geocentric angular positions by the method of Gauss.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/12572.html
Elliptical transfer orbit calculation.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/12053.html
The Case of the Mischievous Astronaut (probably somebody's homework problem).
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/6204.html
Orbital elements for solar system planets.
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/3160.html
Hohmann transfer orbits (worked examples).
http://jenab6.livejournal.com/1510.html
Jerry Abbott
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