Member
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2018
- Messages
- 124
@vick_detri
Those details are so insignificant and easily overshadowed by things like slight imprecisions in the initial burn that it would make no sense to even bother calculating them.
I agree with @baconcat, going to the Moon does not require such complex calculations. You can even get there by using KSP math (patched conics approach, calculating the spacecraft's trajectory as if it was affected by only 1 celestial body at a time) and still get pretty decent results.
Those details are so insignificant and easily overshadowed by things like slight imprecisions in the initial burn that it would make no sense to even bother calculating them.
I agree with @baconcat, going to the Moon does not require such complex calculations. You can even get there by using KSP math (patched conics approach, calculating the spacecraft's trajectory as if it was affected by only 1 celestial body at a time) and still get pretty decent results.