by Nitpicker » Mon Nov 11, 2013 8:57 am
Chris Peterson wrote:Nitpicker wrote:Well, a barycentre is often just a point in space, too. Perhaps we can agree that this is just another semantic argument over the word "orbit"?
I'll concede if you will.
I'm not saying they are using orbit wrong, because it has different meanings. But since we generally think of orbits in terms of a small mass around a large one, it's easy to get confused by what a halo orbit really is. The standard equations for describing orbits don't describe anything around a barycenter, either, since the equations again assume a very large difference in mass between the two bodies, so the smaller one orbits around the center of the large one.
Anyway, whatever you want to call it, don't think it's remotely Keplerian. The path is non-planar, non-conic, and isn't around a central mass.
I wasn't thinking about whether simple or more complex
kinetic models are required to sufficiently describe any of these orbits. I was thinking about orbits in terms of their
kinematics only. If C goes around B and B goes around A, it is more straightforward to say C orbits B, than to say C orbits A, though I concede the latter is still true.
[quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="Nitpicker"]Well, a barycentre is often just a point in space, too. Perhaps we can agree that this is just another semantic argument over the word "orbit"? :blah: I'll concede if you will.[/quote]
I'm not saying they are using orbit wrong, because it has different meanings. But since we generally think of orbits in terms of a small mass around a large one, it's easy to get confused by what a halo orbit really is. The standard equations for describing orbits don't describe anything around a barycenter, either, since the equations again assume a very large difference in mass between the two bodies, so the smaller one orbits around the center of the large one.
Anyway, whatever you want to call it, don't think it's remotely Keplerian. The path is non-planar, non-conic, and isn't around a central mass.[/quote]
I wasn't thinking about whether simple or more complex [u]kinetic[/u] models are required to sufficiently describe any of these orbits. I was thinking about orbits in terms of their [u]kinematics[/u] only. If C goes around B and B goes around A, it is more straightforward to say C orbits B, than to say C orbits A, though I concede the latter is still true.