Ballistic simulator Orbit allows the physical principles of the motion in the gravitational field of the Earth to be demonstrated and learned. You can calculate with this program the ballistic trajectories of the thrown bodies and orbits of spacecrafts and visualize the astroballistic situation on the flat map of the world and on the rotating globe in the real time
Hits: 1879 | Votes: 3 | Rating: 7.33
Details
The resource is currently on dxzone.com in just one category. Main category is
Satellite tracking that is about Ham radio programs for satellite tracking.
This link has been on our site since Thursday Jun 2 2005, and it has been clicked on 1879 times. So far it received 3 votes for a total score of 7.33/10
Discover more websites like this one in these categories:
Rate this resource
it received 3 votes for a total score of 7.33/10
The scale is 1 - 10, with 1 being poor and 10 being excellent.
Webmaster, add a Remote rating
Report this link
If you find this link broken, not working or inappropriate, please
Report this link to us.
Related links
Explore these additional resources we've chosen for you from the same category, as we believe they might also capture your interest.
- Nova For Windows - Real time tracking of an unlimited number of satellites, fast, accurat...
- Orbitron - Orbitron is a freeware (cardware) application dedicaed to satellite tr...
- Winorbit - Satellite Orbital Prediction and Satellite Tracking...
- TrakSat WinTrak - Wintrak and traksat, satellite tracking software...
- Satscape - Satscape is a freeware program for the PC Macintosh and Linux. It prod...
Visit this link
|
Ballistic simulator Orbit
|
|
Share this resource
Share this link with your friends, publish within popular social networks or send it via email.
Search
About Us
The DXZone is the largest human created library of amateur radio Web sites, it currently lists more than 20,000 links organized into more than 600 categories. Since 1998, a group of radio amateurs has been reviewing new sites for listing every day and evaluating the best place to list them. The DXZone is one of the longest-running amateur radio sites still active on the Web.
Survey