Calculating a de-orbit burn, is this problem written correctly?
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
I'm having trouble finding the velocity and acceleration and therefore the time in seconds it takes, and I find the way the problem is written confusing, especially
- Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
where the units do not even appear to agree, giving delta-v in m/s². Is it just me, or is there something amiss in the question?
Here is a screenshot of the original question, below has been kindly transcribed in edits.
The question:
During a de-orbit burn, a pre-calculated ∆V (delta V, change in velocity) will be used to decrease the Orion MPCV’s altitude. The Orion MPCV’s Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) engines provide a combined thrust force of 53,000 Newtons. The Orion MPCV has a mass of 25,848 kg when fully loaded.
What is the difference between the Orion MPCV’s mass and weight? An object’s mass does not change from place to place, but an object’s weight does change as it moves to a place with a different gravitational potential. For example, an object on the moon has the same mass it had while on the Earth but the object will weigh less on the moon due to the moon’s decreased gravitational potential. The Orion MPCV always has the same mass but will weigh less while in orbit than it does while on Earth’s surface.
CALCULATION: Calculate how long a de-orbit burn must last in seconds to achieve the Orion MPCV’s change in altitude from 343.5 kilometers to 96.5 kilometers at perigee. Use the equations and conversions provided to find the required burn time.
Equations to use:
Newton’s Second Law: $F=ma$
- Where:
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second $left( m over s^2 right)$ units
$F$ = force is in Newtons $1N = 1left(kg−m over s^2 right)$
$M$ = mass is in kg units
- Solve for $a = fracFm$
Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
Equation that defines average acceleration, the amount by which velocity will change in a given amount of time:
$a = fracDelta Vt$
Rearranging the acceleration equation above to find the time required for a specific velocity change given a specific acceleration, where
$t = fracDelta Va$
$Delta V$ = change in velocity in meters per second $m over s$
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second, $m over s^2$
$t$ = required time in seconds (this is the value that you are solving for)
(The mix of $M$ and $m$ for both meters and mass is in the original text)
orbital-mechanics
|
show 15 more comments
I'm having trouble finding the velocity and acceleration and therefore the time in seconds it takes, and I find the way the problem is written confusing, especially
- Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
where the units do not even appear to agree, giving delta-v in m/s². Is it just me, or is there something amiss in the question?
Here is a screenshot of the original question, below has been kindly transcribed in edits.
The question:
During a de-orbit burn, a pre-calculated ∆V (delta V, change in velocity) will be used to decrease the Orion MPCV’s altitude. The Orion MPCV’s Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) engines provide a combined thrust force of 53,000 Newtons. The Orion MPCV has a mass of 25,848 kg when fully loaded.
What is the difference between the Orion MPCV’s mass and weight? An object’s mass does not change from place to place, but an object’s weight does change as it moves to a place with a different gravitational potential. For example, an object on the moon has the same mass it had while on the Earth but the object will weigh less on the moon due to the moon’s decreased gravitational potential. The Orion MPCV always has the same mass but will weigh less while in orbit than it does while on Earth’s surface.
CALCULATION: Calculate how long a de-orbit burn must last in seconds to achieve the Orion MPCV’s change in altitude from 343.5 kilometers to 96.5 kilometers at perigee. Use the equations and conversions provided to find the required burn time.
Equations to use:
Newton’s Second Law: $F=ma$
- Where:
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second $left( m over s^2 right)$ units
$F$ = force is in Newtons $1N = 1left(kg−m over s^2 right)$
$M$ = mass is in kg units
- Solve for $a = fracFm$
Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
Equation that defines average acceleration, the amount by which velocity will change in a given amount of time:
$a = fracDelta Vt$
Rearranging the acceleration equation above to find the time required for a specific velocity change given a specific acceleration, where
$t = fracDelta Va$
$Delta V$ = change in velocity in meters per second $m over s$
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second, $m over s^2$
$t$ = required time in seconds (this is the value that you are solving for)
(The mix of $M$ and $m$ for both meters and mass is in the original text)
orbital-mechanics
1
Fear not! There are plenty of very capable people on here, but I'd advise tidying up the question and making it somewhat clearer to help them help you
– Jack
Dec 29 '18 at 23:44
1
Please edit this wall of text down to one single question. You can omit all the background and editorial material.
– Organic Marble
Dec 29 '18 at 23:57
1
What are the values you have obtained for each step so far?
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 0:15
1
@uhoh I transcribed the MathJax. I've proofread it a bunch of times but there may still be errors. For reference, I've linked the screenshot the OP provided at the bottom of the question. WRT your last question, that equation is transcribed correctly.
– Alex Hajnal
Dec 30 '18 at 1:29
2
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be m/s instead of m/s² -- it's very close to a 2 fps = 1 mile rule-of-thumb for LEO altitude changes, which works out to 0.366 m/s per kilometer.
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 2:03
|
show 15 more comments
I'm having trouble finding the velocity and acceleration and therefore the time in seconds it takes, and I find the way the problem is written confusing, especially
- Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
where the units do not even appear to agree, giving delta-v in m/s². Is it just me, or is there something amiss in the question?
Here is a screenshot of the original question, below has been kindly transcribed in edits.
The question:
During a de-orbit burn, a pre-calculated ∆V (delta V, change in velocity) will be used to decrease the Orion MPCV’s altitude. The Orion MPCV’s Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) engines provide a combined thrust force of 53,000 Newtons. The Orion MPCV has a mass of 25,848 kg when fully loaded.
What is the difference between the Orion MPCV’s mass and weight? An object’s mass does not change from place to place, but an object’s weight does change as it moves to a place with a different gravitational potential. For example, an object on the moon has the same mass it had while on the Earth but the object will weigh less on the moon due to the moon’s decreased gravitational potential. The Orion MPCV always has the same mass but will weigh less while in orbit than it does while on Earth’s surface.
CALCULATION: Calculate how long a de-orbit burn must last in seconds to achieve the Orion MPCV’s change in altitude from 343.5 kilometers to 96.5 kilometers at perigee. Use the equations and conversions provided to find the required burn time.
Equations to use:
Newton’s Second Law: $F=ma$
- Where:
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second $left( m over s^2 right)$ units
$F$ = force is in Newtons $1N = 1left(kg−m over s^2 right)$
$M$ = mass is in kg units
- Solve for $a = fracFm$
Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
Equation that defines average acceleration, the amount by which velocity will change in a given amount of time:
$a = fracDelta Vt$
Rearranging the acceleration equation above to find the time required for a specific velocity change given a specific acceleration, where
$t = fracDelta Va$
$Delta V$ = change in velocity in meters per second $m over s$
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second, $m over s^2$
$t$ = required time in seconds (this is the value that you are solving for)
(The mix of $M$ and $m$ for both meters and mass is in the original text)
orbital-mechanics
I'm having trouble finding the velocity and acceleration and therefore the time in seconds it takes, and I find the way the problem is written confusing, especially
- Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
where the units do not even appear to agree, giving delta-v in m/s². Is it just me, or is there something amiss in the question?
Here is a screenshot of the original question, below has been kindly transcribed in edits.
The question:
During a de-orbit burn, a pre-calculated ∆V (delta V, change in velocity) will be used to decrease the Orion MPCV’s altitude. The Orion MPCV’s Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) engines provide a combined thrust force of 53,000 Newtons. The Orion MPCV has a mass of 25,848 kg when fully loaded.
What is the difference between the Orion MPCV’s mass and weight? An object’s mass does not change from place to place, but an object’s weight does change as it moves to a place with a different gravitational potential. For example, an object on the moon has the same mass it had while on the Earth but the object will weigh less on the moon due to the moon’s decreased gravitational potential. The Orion MPCV always has the same mass but will weigh less while in orbit than it does while on Earth’s surface.
CALCULATION: Calculate how long a de-orbit burn must last in seconds to achieve the Orion MPCV’s change in altitude from 343.5 kilometers to 96.5 kilometers at perigee. Use the equations and conversions provided to find the required burn time.
Equations to use:
Newton’s Second Law: $F=ma$
- Where:
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second $left( m over s^2 right)$ units
$F$ = force is in Newtons $1N = 1left(kg−m over s^2 right)$
$M$ = mass is in kg units
- Solve for $a = fracFm$
Determination of $Delta V$:
- Find the change in altitude (Original Perigee - New Perigee)
- Use the conversion factor of
$left( 0.379fracms^2 over 1km right)$
- Equation should read:
$Delta V = (Change in Altitude) times 0.379$
Equation that defines average acceleration, the amount by which velocity will change in a given amount of time:
$a = fracDelta Vt$
Rearranging the acceleration equation above to find the time required for a specific velocity change given a specific acceleration, where
$t = fracDelta Va$
$Delta V$ = change in velocity in meters per second $m over s$
$a$ = acceleration is in meters per second per second, $m over s^2$
$t$ = required time in seconds (this is the value that you are solving for)
(The mix of $M$ and $m$ for both meters and mass is in the original text)
orbital-mechanics
orbital-mechanics
edited Dec 30 '18 at 1:55
uhoh
35.4k18123442
35.4k18123442
asked Dec 29 '18 at 23:22
Hro djdjdHro djdjd
185
185
1
Fear not! There are plenty of very capable people on here, but I'd advise tidying up the question and making it somewhat clearer to help them help you
– Jack
Dec 29 '18 at 23:44
1
Please edit this wall of text down to one single question. You can omit all the background and editorial material.
– Organic Marble
Dec 29 '18 at 23:57
1
What are the values you have obtained for each step so far?
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 0:15
1
@uhoh I transcribed the MathJax. I've proofread it a bunch of times but there may still be errors. For reference, I've linked the screenshot the OP provided at the bottom of the question. WRT your last question, that equation is transcribed correctly.
– Alex Hajnal
Dec 30 '18 at 1:29
2
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be m/s instead of m/s² -- it's very close to a 2 fps = 1 mile rule-of-thumb for LEO altitude changes, which works out to 0.366 m/s per kilometer.
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 2:03
|
show 15 more comments
1
Fear not! There are plenty of very capable people on here, but I'd advise tidying up the question and making it somewhat clearer to help them help you
– Jack
Dec 29 '18 at 23:44
1
Please edit this wall of text down to one single question. You can omit all the background and editorial material.
– Organic Marble
Dec 29 '18 at 23:57
1
What are the values you have obtained for each step so far?
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 0:15
1
@uhoh I transcribed the MathJax. I've proofread it a bunch of times but there may still be errors. For reference, I've linked the screenshot the OP provided at the bottom of the question. WRT your last question, that equation is transcribed correctly.
– Alex Hajnal
Dec 30 '18 at 1:29
2
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be m/s instead of m/s² -- it's very close to a 2 fps = 1 mile rule-of-thumb for LEO altitude changes, which works out to 0.366 m/s per kilometer.
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 2:03
1
1
Fear not! There are plenty of very capable people on here, but I'd advise tidying up the question and making it somewhat clearer to help them help you
– Jack
Dec 29 '18 at 23:44
Fear not! There are plenty of very capable people on here, but I'd advise tidying up the question and making it somewhat clearer to help them help you
– Jack
Dec 29 '18 at 23:44
1
1
Please edit this wall of text down to one single question. You can omit all the background and editorial material.
– Organic Marble
Dec 29 '18 at 23:57
Please edit this wall of text down to one single question. You can omit all the background and editorial material.
– Organic Marble
Dec 29 '18 at 23:57
1
1
What are the values you have obtained for each step so far?
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 0:15
What are the values you have obtained for each step so far?
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 0:15
1
1
@uhoh I transcribed the MathJax. I've proofread it a bunch of times but there may still be errors. For reference, I've linked the screenshot the OP provided at the bottom of the question. WRT your last question, that equation is transcribed correctly.
– Alex Hajnal
Dec 30 '18 at 1:29
@uhoh I transcribed the MathJax. I've proofread it a bunch of times but there may still be errors. For reference, I've linked the screenshot the OP provided at the bottom of the question. WRT your last question, that equation is transcribed correctly.
– Alex Hajnal
Dec 30 '18 at 1:29
2
2
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be m/s instead of m/s² -- it's very close to a 2 fps = 1 mile rule-of-thumb for LEO altitude changes, which works out to 0.366 m/s per kilometer.
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 2:03
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be m/s instead of m/s² -- it's very close to a 2 fps = 1 mile rule-of-thumb for LEO altitude changes, which works out to 0.366 m/s per kilometer.
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 2:03
|
show 15 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Assume that the 0.379 m/s² / km is a unit error, and the factor is supposed to be 0.379 m/s / km. I believe this is the fundamental mistake in the problem statement.
Step 1: The delta-v required is equal to the change in altitude in km, multiplied by the conversion factor. ∆v is measured in meters per second.
Step 2: Compute the acceleration of the spacecraft in m/s² by dividing the given thrust in N by the given mass in kg.
Step 3: Divide the ∆v by the acceleration to get time in seconds.
The 0.379 m/s per km is a metricization of a rule of thumb in round Imperial-unit numbers: it's equal to 2 feet-per-second per mile, which isn't even particularly close to the correct value, which varies depending on the starting altitude but is generally closer to 0.3 for LEO maneuvers.
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
1
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
|
show 7 more comments
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Assume that the 0.379 m/s² / km is a unit error, and the factor is supposed to be 0.379 m/s / km. I believe this is the fundamental mistake in the problem statement.
Step 1: The delta-v required is equal to the change in altitude in km, multiplied by the conversion factor. ∆v is measured in meters per second.
Step 2: Compute the acceleration of the spacecraft in m/s² by dividing the given thrust in N by the given mass in kg.
Step 3: Divide the ∆v by the acceleration to get time in seconds.
The 0.379 m/s per km is a metricization of a rule of thumb in round Imperial-unit numbers: it's equal to 2 feet-per-second per mile, which isn't even particularly close to the correct value, which varies depending on the starting altitude but is generally closer to 0.3 for LEO maneuvers.
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
1
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
|
show 7 more comments
Assume that the 0.379 m/s² / km is a unit error, and the factor is supposed to be 0.379 m/s / km. I believe this is the fundamental mistake in the problem statement.
Step 1: The delta-v required is equal to the change in altitude in km, multiplied by the conversion factor. ∆v is measured in meters per second.
Step 2: Compute the acceleration of the spacecraft in m/s² by dividing the given thrust in N by the given mass in kg.
Step 3: Divide the ∆v by the acceleration to get time in seconds.
The 0.379 m/s per km is a metricization of a rule of thumb in round Imperial-unit numbers: it's equal to 2 feet-per-second per mile, which isn't even particularly close to the correct value, which varies depending on the starting altitude but is generally closer to 0.3 for LEO maneuvers.
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
1
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
|
show 7 more comments
Assume that the 0.379 m/s² / km is a unit error, and the factor is supposed to be 0.379 m/s / km. I believe this is the fundamental mistake in the problem statement.
Step 1: The delta-v required is equal to the change in altitude in km, multiplied by the conversion factor. ∆v is measured in meters per second.
Step 2: Compute the acceleration of the spacecraft in m/s² by dividing the given thrust in N by the given mass in kg.
Step 3: Divide the ∆v by the acceleration to get time in seconds.
The 0.379 m/s per km is a metricization of a rule of thumb in round Imperial-unit numbers: it's equal to 2 feet-per-second per mile, which isn't even particularly close to the correct value, which varies depending on the starting altitude but is generally closer to 0.3 for LEO maneuvers.
Assume that the 0.379 m/s² / km is a unit error, and the factor is supposed to be 0.379 m/s / km. I believe this is the fundamental mistake in the problem statement.
Step 1: The delta-v required is equal to the change in altitude in km, multiplied by the conversion factor. ∆v is measured in meters per second.
Step 2: Compute the acceleration of the spacecraft in m/s² by dividing the given thrust in N by the given mass in kg.
Step 3: Divide the ∆v by the acceleration to get time in seconds.
The 0.379 m/s per km is a metricization of a rule of thumb in round Imperial-unit numbers: it's equal to 2 feet-per-second per mile, which isn't even particularly close to the correct value, which varies depending on the starting altitude but is generally closer to 0.3 for LEO maneuvers.
edited Dec 30 '18 at 3:25
answered Dec 30 '18 at 2:57
Russell BorogoveRussell Borogove
83.6k2281361
83.6k2281361
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
1
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
|
show 7 more comments
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
1
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I was trying to lead the questioner to see their mistake in (your) step 2. I think your problem statement is correct.
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 3:10
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
I did this and ended up getting 46.4 but it said it was incorrect
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:15
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Change in altitude multiplied by 0.379 = 98.2 the f/m is 2 I then divided these two by doing 98.2/2 and got 46.4 if you're wondering
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:17
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
Why are you dividing by 2?
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 3:20
1
1
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
I GOT IT CORRECT THANK YOU GUYS! I WAS ON MY FINAL TRY AND I GOT IT WOOHOOOO!!!
– Hro djdjd
Dec 30 '18 at 3:37
|
show 7 more comments
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1
Fear not! There are plenty of very capable people on here, but I'd advise tidying up the question and making it somewhat clearer to help them help you
– Jack
Dec 29 '18 at 23:44
1
Please edit this wall of text down to one single question. You can omit all the background and editorial material.
– Organic Marble
Dec 29 '18 at 23:57
1
What are the values you have obtained for each step so far?
– Organic Marble
Dec 30 '18 at 0:15
1
@uhoh I transcribed the MathJax. I've proofread it a bunch of times but there may still be errors. For reference, I've linked the screenshot the OP provided at the bottom of the question. WRT your last question, that equation is transcribed correctly.
– Alex Hajnal
Dec 30 '18 at 1:29
2
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to be m/s instead of m/s² -- it's very close to a 2 fps = 1 mile rule-of-thumb for LEO altitude changes, which works out to 0.366 m/s per kilometer.
– Russell Borogove
Dec 30 '18 at 2:03