Eccentricity vector

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Revision as of 02:16, 11 October 2025 by imported>Я сошла с ума (Adding local short description: "Vector in celestial mechanics", overriding Wikidata description "in celestial mechanics, a dimensionless vector with direction pointing from apoapsis to periapsis")
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Template:Short description In celestial mechanics, the eccentricity vector of a Kepler orbit is the dimensionless vector with direction pointing from apoapsis to periapsis and with magnitude equal to the orbit's scalar eccentricity. For Kepler orbits the eccentricity vector is a constant of motion. Its main use is in the analysis of almost circular orbits, as perturbing (non-Keplerian) forces on an actual orbit will cause the osculating eccentricity vector to change continuously as opposed to the eccentricity and argument of periapsis parameters for which eccentricity zero (circular orbit) corresponds to a singularity.

Calculation

The eccentricity vector <math> \mathbf{e} </math> is: <ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

<math> \mathbf{e} = {\mathbf{v}\times\mathbf{h}\over{\mu}} - {\mathbf{r}\over{\left|\mathbf{r}\right|}} =

\left ( {\mathbf{\left |v \right |}^2 \over {\mu} }- {1 \over{\left|\mathbf{r}\right|}} \right ) \mathbf{r} - {\mathbf{r} \cdot \mathbf{v} \over{\mu}} \mathbf{v} </math>

which follows immediately from the vector identity:

<math> \mathbf{v}\times \left ( \mathbf{r}\times \mathbf{v} \right ) = \left ( \mathbf{v} \cdot \mathbf{v} \right ) \mathbf{r} - \left ( \mathbf{r} \cdot \mathbf{v} \right ) \mathbf{v}</math>

where:

See also

References

Template:Reflist