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halo orbit : ウィキペディア英語版
halo orbit
A halo orbit is a periodic, three-dimensional orbit near the L1, L2 or L3 Lagrange points in the three-body problem of orbital mechanics. Although a spacecraft in a halo orbit moves in a circular path around the Lagrange point, it does not technically orbit the actual Lagrange point, because the Lagrange point is just an equilibrium point with no gravitational pull, but travels in a closed, repeating path near the Lagrange point. Halo orbits are the result of a complicated interaction between the gravitational pull of the two planetary bodies and the Coriolis and centrifugal accelerations on a spacecraft. Halo orbits exist in many three-body systems, such as the SunEarth system and the Earth–Moon system. Continuous "families" of both Northern and Southern halo orbits exist at each Lagrange point. Because halo orbits tend to be unstable, stationkeeping is required to keep a satellite on the orbit.
== Definition and history ==
Robert W. Farquhar first used the name "halo" for these orbits in his 1968 Ph.D. thesis.〔Farquhar, R. W.: "The Control and Use of Libration-Point Satellites", Ph.D. Dissertation, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1968〕 Farquhar advocated using spacecraft in a halo orbit on the far side of the Moon (Earth–Moon ) as a communications relay station for an Apollo mission to the far side of the Moon. A spacecraft in such a halo orbit would be in continuous view of both the Earth and the far side of the Moon. In the end, neither a communication link satellite nor an Apollo co-mission positioned at for a far side Apollo lunar landing ever took flight.
Farquhar used analytical expressions to represent halo orbits, but Kathleen Howell showed that more precise trajectories could be computed numerically.〔Howell, K. C.: "Three-Dimensional, Periodic, 'Halo' Orbits", Celestial Mechanics, Volume 32, Number 53, 1984〕
The first mission to use a halo orbit was ISEE-3, launched in 1978. It traveled to the Sun–Earth point and remained there for several years. The next mission to use a halo orbit was Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), a joint ESA and NASA mission to study the Sun, which arrived at Sun–Earth in 1996. It used an orbit similar to ISEE-3.〔Dunham, D.W. and Farquhar, R. W.: "Libration-Point Missions 1978-2000," Libration Point Orbits and Applications, Parador d'Aiguablava, Girona, Spain, June 2002〕 Although several other missions since then have traveled to Lagrange points, they typically have used the related non-periodic variations called Lissajous orbits than an actual halo orbit. For example, Genesis, launched in 2001, which also pioneered the use of dynamical systems theory to find low-energy trajectories to and from its orbit.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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