Editing Forum:Satellite orbit question

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: Thanks. I thought about that after I posted the question.
 
: Thanks. I thought about that after I posted the question.
  
Incorrect actually. The position number is the planetary '''radii''', not diameters - it says so right there at the bottom of the table on page 28.  A satellite in position 7 is therefore orbiting at a distance of 7 planetary ''radii'' (i.e. 3.5 diameters). Obviously, to determine that distance you take the planet's UWP size code and divide it by two, then multiply the result by the number of radii, and then multiply that by 1000 for orbital distance in miles (or by 1600 for orbital distance in km). Trying this for Luna gives a result of 384000 km, which is roughly right (about 60 earth radii). [[User:Evildrganymede|Evildrganymede]] 19:05, July 31, 2010 (UTC)
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Incorrect actually. The position number is the planetary '''radii''', not diameters - it says so right there at the bottom of the table on page 28.  A satellite in position 7 is therefore orbiting at a distance of 7 planetary radii. [[User:Evildrganymede|Evildrganymede]] 19:05, July 31, 2010 (UTC)

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