The Satellite Orbit Tier List

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
  • Space is filled with satellites in interesting orbits, but which one is best? A crash course in astrodynamics in the format of "the BBC if they decided make a tier list video".
    0:00 Introduction
    1:05 Very Low Earth
    1:55 International Space Station
    2:36 Walker Constellation
    3:12 Sun Synchronous
    4:00 GPS
    4:46 Flower
    6:09 GEO
    7:07 Graveyard
    7:50 Molniya
    8:22 Tundra
    8:44 QZSS
    9:11 Distant Retrograde
    9:49 Lagrange
    10:43 Outroduction
    --------- II ---------
    This video was brought to you by an unhealthy amount of coffee and our awesome Patrons at / atomicfrontier .
    --------- II ---------
    Hi, I'm James. I explore the world looking for interesting engineering stories which explore complex issues in interesting ways. I hold a First-Class Honors in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Western Australia and am currently studying a Masters of Space Systems Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
    My website is www.atomicfrontieronline.com, I occasionally tweet from / atomicfrontiers , and you can join the Atomic Frontier Discord server to talk about cool engineering stuff at / discord . You can help support my work and see some cool behind-the-scenes content at / atomicfrontier .

Комментарии • 481

  • @AtomicFrontier
    @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +645

    I had no idea there were so many orbits! The Flower ones still freak me out a little

    • @DMPTC
      @DMPTC Год назад +21

      Witch space station that dosent "oficially" exist on L3? 🧐

    • @blindleader42
      @blindleader42 Год назад +1

      @@DMPTC "Official" designation: MA.NTSH
      Move Along. Nothing to see here.

    • @TheGreatRoja
      @TheGreatRoja Год назад +3

      Personally I'm a fan of Horseshoe orbits. I'm not sure what they're good for, but the way they work is pretty cool.

    • @NNZaero4066
      @NNZaero4066 Год назад +6

      I love that you showed KSP!

    • @Yozo_official
      @Yozo_official Год назад +1

      Same

  • @nyuh
    @nyuh Год назад +1725

    if theres a meta-tierlist that ranks tierlists, this tierlist would be in the S tier.

    • @mluby7828
      @mluby7828 Год назад +87

      That tier list would contain itself.

    • @samwolfenstein5239
      @samwolfenstein5239 Год назад +83

      @@mluby7828 does a tier list of all tier lists contain itself? hmm, this problem sounds familiar for some reason...

    • @Deutsch_Gamer
      @Deutsch_Gamer Год назад +12

      @@samwolfenstein5239 it’s a paradoxical question.

    • @hanzsoy5274
      @hanzsoy5274 Год назад +15

      ​@@samwolfenstein5239 Russell's paradox :D

    • @petterlarsson7257
      @petterlarsson7257 7 месяцев назад +14

      @@samwolfenstein5239 the paradoxial question is does a list of all list that don't contain themselves contain itself not the ones that do HOLY FUCKING SHIT WHY IS THIS A PARADOX OF COURSE IT DOES

  • @jakobrosenqvist4691
    @jakobrosenqvist4691 Год назад +297

    I find it hard not to put geostationary in S-tier, it's just so damn useful for so many things.

    • @JKa244
      @JKa244 8 месяцев назад +11

      Honestly all of the geosynchronous orbits are pretty great. 1:1 is a nice one

    • @armandsilva8792
      @armandsilva8792 4 месяца назад +5

      exactly, as a space professional who has ever only known GEO its jarring to see it below SSO and especially GPS (MEO)

  • @axthelm
    @axthelm Год назад +607

    I'm sad that you used the ISS for LEO orbits and ignored the rest. IceSat 2, Terra (any of the EOS satellites really), almost any spy satellite, or even Fermi and Hubble at the upper edge would have been a better option to talk about. None of them have the wonky inclination problems the ISS has. The biggest benefits of LEO are the variety of orbit types (look at the sun-synchronous LEO orbit of the A-Train) and ease of accessibly; it is the orbit of choice for most missions. Remember when Hubble had a lens problem? it wasn't too hard to get up there and fix it. It was the orbit height of choice for the space shuttles. Need a new earth observation? Throw it in LEO. You don't need a massive amount of fuel or complicated burns to get your satellite up there. The downside is that because of the convenience it is now cluttered with thousands of objects; include debris from nations shooting rockets at satellites to prove a point. I would give LEO a solid B-tier; not impressive but the work-horse of orbits.

    • @DrNatemiester
      @DrNatemiester 4 месяца назад +1

      Where are you filming from? Was that BC/Vancouver? Where’s the snow in Australia?

    • @the-letter_s
      @the-letter_s 4 месяца назад

      @@DrNatemiester Boston.

    • @edwardblair4096
      @edwardblair4096 4 месяца назад

      He covered Sun Synchronous Orbits separately and put them in the A tier. But he could have said more about their use in Earth Observation applications.

    • @galactus21
      @galactus21 4 месяца назад

      So in other words, tiers can vary and different depending on the purpose of the satellite?

    • @tvre0
      @tvre0 Месяц назад

      @@galactus21 yeah so in other words his tierlist is wrong?

  • @rileywilbur3938
    @rileywilbur3938 4 месяца назад +34

    Great video but a slight correction/clarification. The US government doesn’t limit precision like they used to. That was called Selective Availability and was ended in 2000.

  • @playgroundchooser
    @playgroundchooser Год назад +393

    I'm actually a bit surprised that you didn't straight up go to actual space and do a long one take coming back from a high orbit to a lower one. The quality of your channel kind of dictates that level of excellence. Next time, eh?
    I guess I'll just have to be happy with this perfectly explained, expertly animated gem of orbital mechanics. 😀

  • @Somerandom1922
    @Somerandom1922 Год назад +113

    I'm always a huge fan of any orbit where you get really complex and unintuitive interactions from mutliple bodies.
    Being used to KSP style single-body SoI mechanics it's always a trip to see how things actually works in an N-Body system.

    • @porcuspine2368
      @porcuspine2368 Год назад +6

      Yeah like how the Earth's bulginess affects orbits? How the heck do people ever make stable orbits???

    • @samuels1123
      @samuels1123 Год назад +1

      @@porcuspine2368 Rotational equator would be mostly immune to this effect

    • @ed6091
      @ed6091 4 месяца назад

      Im studying them right now and its slightly more complex than ksp 😅
      Love the game though

    • @venum4k
      @venum4k 4 месяца назад

      I'd highly recommend principia for ksp, it adds n-body orbital mechanics

  • @FianFreigeist
    @FianFreigeist Год назад +238

    Beautiful video! I'm not sure what it is, but the video quality of you in front of the camera looks pretty good, together with this interesting and funny topic and clear animations you did an amazing video!

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +61

      Thanks!! Moved over to 4K for this episode and then I put all the footage through an AI to fine-tune the look a little. I also changed my rendering pipeline a bit. Glad that it looks like it worked!

    • @FianFreigeist
      @FianFreigeist Год назад +6

      @@AtomicFrontier You bet it worked! Looks amazing 😁

  • @_AvaGlass
    @_AvaGlass Год назад +64

    First of all, thank you for the subtitles. I know a lot of effort went into them and that effort is appreciated.
    Second, thank you for the 3D motion tracking. It has kind of become a hallmark of your channel and it adds a ton to the production value.
    Finally, how does this only have 11,530 views after 13 hours??

  • @anonnymousperson
    @anonnymousperson Год назад +19

    Your tier list is S tier.
    'Lagrange orbits, because you can't call everything Euler!'

  • @jd7863
    @jd7863 Год назад +62

    Hitting it out of the park again! Your on-location filming skills are out of this world

  • @AthAthanasius
    @AthAthanasius Год назад +11

    04:15 - That's trilateration (using distances to known positions), not triangulation (using bearing angles to known positions).
    Also, GPS uses 4D space time calculations so that you don't actually need the receiver to *also* have a highly accurate atomic clock. Instead you just add a dimension, which means also needing an additional reference point, and learn not only where you are in 3D space, but also when you are in time.

    • @bbbnuy3945
      @bbbnuy3945 Год назад +2

      aw snap, i literally just made this comment about trilateration instead of triangulation. Didnt know about the 4D space aspect -but makes sense cuz the calculations are time based. Cool! and thank you

    • @AthAthanasius
      @AthAthanasius Год назад

      @@bbbnuy3945 Yeah, until I was clued in about that part I was wondering HTF the GPS receivers had a good idea of the time so as to compare the incoming timestamps. Turns out they don't need to !

  • @Nekzuris
    @Nekzuris Год назад +6

    4:38 well not really, today GPS accuracy is not artificially limited, it's the ionosphere that cause signal distorsion and it's easy to correct it with RTK. Every modern farmer has RTK GPS to precisely guide the tractor on the fields with centimeter precision.
    For civilians, RTK corrections can be acquired via radio or internet, and the military can get them directly from the satellite.

  • @danem.9402
    @danem.9402 4 месяца назад +4

    Wow! I graduated from Texas A&M and I had no idea the ‘flower petal’ orbits were developed by an Aggie! Very interesting video thanks

  • @resurgam_b7
    @resurgam_b7 Год назад +20

    I could listen to orbits and orbital mechanics being described for hours 😂

  • @solidmagmr
    @solidmagmr Год назад +9

    I would have never guessed that I would be able to watch a tier list of Satellite Orbits and enjoy it this much.

  • @timothygooding9544
    @timothygooding9544 4 месяца назад +2

    3:26 THANK YOU FOR EXPLAINING PURTUBATIONS
    Literally the hardest thing to get a straight answer from professors about when discussing orbits

    • @efulmer8675
      @efulmer8675 3 месяца назад

      Orbital perturbations come from a variety of sources (technically every single particle in the universe is perturbing the orbit of every other particle in the universe) and orbital mechanics as a whole is not solved (this is known as the "3-body" or "N-body" problem where there is no known way to analyze an orbit and determine to infinity what happens to it) so if you're asking questions of professors on this subject, either narrow down your questions or realize that you may be asking a question that is the subject of current mathematical and theoretical research.

  • @ReliableDragon
    @ReliableDragon Год назад +17

    Great video!! Some really amazing animations and shots in this one, was a ton of fun to watch!

  • @FaynarsSaiqo
    @FaynarsSaiqo Год назад +4

    I love (and was totally surprised by) the Seagulls (Stop it Now) appearance!

  • @DrBunnyMedicinal
    @DrBunnyMedicinal Год назад +6

    Great video, and I especially liked the Lagrange/Euler commentary! 😄
    Amazing work, as always, mate. 👏

  • @terribleideas2
    @terribleideas2 Год назад +14

    So awesome! I’m a grad student at MIT as well. Would be surreal to see you walking down the infinite! Good luck with your studies, and where’s that fire tower where you filmed at? I would guess somewhere in Maine.

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +6

      Nice! Yup if you see me come say hi! That was up in Arcadia National Park Maine, stayed in a place called Bah Harbour - definitely reccomend for when it's a bit warmer

    • @terribleideas2
      @terribleideas2 Год назад +1

      @@AtomicFrontier Oh yeah Acadia and Bah Hahbah is definitely on my list!

  • @fiercemonkey1
    @fiercemonkey1 Год назад +3

    funny, informative, slick composition, and is totally getting a like, and im already sub'ed. well done dudes, please make more! tier lists are always fun! hugs from Atlanta GA! cheers! 😊

  • @NNZaero4066
    @NNZaero4066 Год назад +5

    I never thought of seeing a moon orbit from the perspective of the earth. You gave me a whole new way to look at orbits. Thank you!

  • @LV-qr8fr
    @LV-qr8fr Год назад +7

    Ummm I think this is my fav video of yours to date!!! You are awesome at making things I didn't ever think about really interesting and fun to watch and think about. And you are one of the channels whose videos I always want to look at vs just listen to. The visuals are so good 👍 ty for sharing ☺️

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +2

      Thanks you! That honestly really means a lot right now, been a tough video this one

  • @aande1
    @aande1 Год назад +17

    Awesome video a always, but too short. For some of the orbits I'd wished for some more explanations and how they work in general.

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +14

      Thanks! Original script was closer to 30 minutes, but I've been trying to keep them closer to 10. Might do a follow-up with some of the individual orbits sometime

    • @manuela.4060
      @manuela.4060 Год назад +6

      @@AtomicFrontier Maybe running it over your patreon would be of interest to you, since I assume you want to keep your watch time percentage up. It also helps that your dedicated viewers are usually the ones more interested in the "extended version", hence there might be an increase in your patreon sub-count :) .

    • @Vernardo
      @Vernardo Год назад

      @@AtomicFrontier If you did release this on Nebula, I would pay you extras.

  • @FilmscoreMetaler
    @FilmscoreMetaler Год назад +5

    Just when I asked myself "Hey what happened to The Atomic Frontier" there you are with another banger video. =D

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +8

      Thanks! These episodes are starting to take an obscene amout of time and effort to produce (plus my thesis is due next month) so it's been hard to keep up the production rate! Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @FilmscoreMetaler
      @FilmscoreMetaler Год назад +2

      ​@@AtomicFrontier Yes you put an insane amount of effort into your videos which is highly appreciated. If only the algorithm valued quality over quantity, too. But since it doesn't anyway, feel free to take as much time off for your thesis (and also some rest afterwards). All the best for you! =)
      P.s.: turns out I actually missed your last video so the break felt extra long. ^^

  • @SuLokify
    @SuLokify Год назад +1

    Your videos are already great but they keep getting better and better.

  • @tarotdactyl752
    @tarotdactyl752 4 месяца назад

    I work for a GPS company and didn't know about four of these! Thanks for putting together this video!

  • @KeppyKep
    @KeppyKep Год назад +1

    Great animation, great explanation, and the little captions were hilarious!

  • @MatsuHiroshi
    @MatsuHiroshi Год назад +1

    Those animations were great, and really helped sell your explanations. Well done!

  • @bigbazar5226
    @bigbazar5226 Год назад

    Insane production quality and good video keep it up!

  • @redeyeofthenightfall
    @redeyeofthenightfall Год назад +2

    great video. fun, quality
    keep it going! love this channel

  • @MoctorDac
    @MoctorDac Год назад +2

    I'm so pleased you included lagrange points, easily my favourite :D

  • @technowelliebobs4779
    @technowelliebobs4779 Год назад +1

    Wow, have I only now discovered your channel! Very informative and not too serious. Subbed!

  • @ThePiachu
    @ThePiachu Год назад +2

    Seeing the title of the video I was honestly rooting for Sun-Synchronous Orbit since it's so nice and geeky. Solid A tier material :D.

  • @DenisRyan
    @DenisRyan Год назад +1

    Fantastic video! Loved it! Educated and entertained.

  • @DanieleMortari
    @DanieleMortari Год назад +2

    Thank you so much for this very beautiful video!!!

  • @zigzagzwiggediggedingdong
    @zigzagzwiggediggedingdong Год назад

    You're really getting good at this man Keep it up!

  • @Dav_Wilson
    @Dav_Wilson Год назад

    Really good video Loved the animations!!

  • @user-pw5do6tu7i
    @user-pw5do6tu7i 4 месяца назад

    crazy how all the visuals are on point. nice vid!

  • @HiyuMarten
    @HiyuMarten Год назад +2

    Fantastic explainer! Would also like to mention that some of those super-low-altitude sats might start using a kind of ion ramjet soon - where they use the atmosphere itself as propellant!

  • @Cinebon
    @Cinebon 4 месяца назад +4

    Bro casually walking around Acadia while explaining orbits, what a legend

    • @conroywhitney
      @conroywhitney 4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks, I was wondering where this was filmed. Beautiful.

    • @Cinebon
      @Cinebon 4 месяца назад

      @@conroywhitney no problem. Acadia national park in Maine, it’s a beautiful place. It’s about an hour and a half away from where I live, I definitely recommend.

  • @connorwirsing8318
    @connorwirsing8318 4 месяца назад +1

    love that you went to acadia just to film a space video

  • @someguy9563
    @someguy9563 Год назад

    Great Video James. love the Douglas Adams reference and the FSM cameo (may you be touched by his noodly appendage)

  • @JackAllpikeMusic
    @JackAllpikeMusic Год назад

    Loved the video James! :)

  • @eisvogel.1481
    @eisvogel.1481 Год назад +1

    Very entertaining way to discuss the orbits

  • @grizlld9386
    @grizlld9386 4 месяца назад

    lovely little video

  • @onionknight2239
    @onionknight2239 4 месяца назад +1

    Great presentation 👍

  • @mariateresazacate3896
    @mariateresazacate3896 Год назад

    EXCELLENT & BRILLIANT CHOICES... THANKS..! I've LEARNED at lot. 😊 I LOVED 😍 DOCUMENTARIES...like so SPACE JUNKS.

  • @timestampterrysassistant7638
    @timestampterrysassistant7638 Год назад

    Love your channel space is amazing ❤

  • @CODENAMEDERPY
    @CODENAMEDERPY 4 месяца назад +1

    Very nice vid!

  • @tristanwegner
    @tristanwegner 4 месяца назад

    Love your videos

  • @briangura7818
    @briangura7818 4 месяца назад

    Fantastic content

  • @DoctorPotassium
    @DoctorPotassium Год назад

    Loved this one mate

  • @danielhale1
    @danielhale1 Год назад

    Excellent video! I don't have much to add but it's worth commenting for the algorithm!

  • @jackneri9
    @jackneri9 4 месяца назад

    Great vid!

  • @AroMaths
    @AroMaths Год назад

    Incredible video!

  • @TheFryPo
    @TheFryPo 4 месяца назад +1

    This is genuinely top tier content, definitely on path to become one of the explanation gang

  • @cybersandoval
    @cybersandoval 4 месяца назад

    the demonstration of gravity with the trampoline, very nice

  • @CastaneaMa
    @CastaneaMa Год назад

    Didnt know i needed this!

  • @mahdihosseini6361
    @mahdihosseini6361 4 месяца назад

    Amazing sound choice

  • @jimmyjango5213
    @jimmyjango5213 Год назад

    Fantastic effort, great locations!

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +3

      Thanks! All filmed up in Arcadia National Park, such a cool place!

    • @bontonswanson8977
      @bontonswanson8977 Год назад +1

      ​@@AtomicFrontier No way! I thought I recognized it. I've been in that same place many times. Small correction-*Acadia

  • @mission2858
    @mission2858 4 месяца назад +1

    i like the KSP clips for L1-L5

  • @Ride420Dirty
    @Ride420Dirty 4 месяца назад

    "The ships hung in the sky much the same way that bricks don't", I love me some D.N.A. refrences.

  • @christopherrasmussen8546
    @christopherrasmussen8546 4 месяца назад

    Love it. Used to be a sat com geek. I use an app now that finds most birds. It's nuts how stacked up they are

  • @KSRKiller
    @KSRKiller Год назад +3

    A Fron-Tier list!

  • @clh2533
    @clh2533 Год назад

    Amazing video

  • @ricgondo
    @ricgondo 4 месяца назад

    Wow, what a great video!

  • @philcourteney4328
    @philcourteney4328 4 месяца назад

    Ok wait HOLD THE F8CK ON. This is the first time you’ve ever appeared on my feed, and you have NO RIGHT having such a fkn ICE COLD intro for you 11m science infotainment video! 🤯👍

  • @philcourteney4328
    @philcourteney4328 4 месяца назад

    This is the first video of yours I’ve ever seen and it’s awesome, thank you! You’re gonna be the next Tom Scott/ Matt Parker/ Steve Mold aren’t you?! You’re gonna make me learn complex stuff easily and in an entertaining way, aren’t you!? 🥳👍

  • @Norsilca
    @Norsilca Год назад

    Heyyy, Mount Desert Island! Brave to visit in the winter, but what a fun easter egg for a background!

    • @AtomicFrontier
      @AtomicFrontier  Год назад +1

      Nice spotting! Yup we had to delay it a week... origionally was scheduled for that weekend with "the coldest temperatures in a decade" or something equally aweful to film in

  • @PHDiaz-vv7yo
    @PHDiaz-vv7yo 4 месяца назад

    I love this!!!
    I’m just gonna carry on being heliocentric- just started my 50th orbit

  • @laikavoid3364
    @laikavoid3364 Год назад +2

    Amazing and comprehensive video! This channel belongs in the S tier!

  • @surrog
    @surrog Год назад

    Looking forward for the next video: Atomic orbitals ranked list :D

  • @womp47
    @womp47 Год назад

    this is a really nice video

  • @LouisTheCabbage
    @LouisTheCabbage Год назад +3

    Fantastic stuff! Probably the highest-quality tier list video I've ever seen. I especially enjoyed the mischief at 10:30 😂

  • @greensteve9307
    @greensteve9307 Год назад

    Love the HHGTTG reference @6:11

  • @JerGol
    @JerGol Год назад

    Cracking stuff!

  • @IShowVelocity.
    @IShowVelocity. Год назад

    Nice video 😊

  • @BearDrivingACar
    @BearDrivingACar 4 месяца назад

    As a gundam fan I always get excited when someone mentions lagrange points

  • @zhentharym
    @zhentharym 4 месяца назад +1

    Bit of a technicality, but Walker consists of various different orbits. Some variations (eg Walker-Delta) don't have the issues with polar regions. Should be higher up or at least split into various categories.

  • @tongpoo8985
    @tongpoo8985 4 месяца назад +2

    I like the new tom scott replacement, hes cool

  • @jackjac
    @jackjac Год назад

    The only tier list video that should exist.

  • @GameRetro
    @GameRetro Год назад

    Loved it!

  • @ledgecat9474
    @ledgecat9474 4 месяца назад

    10:07 JEEEEEEBBBB! KERBAL SPACE PROGRAM REFERENCE YIPEEEEE!!!

  • @brookestephen
    @brookestephen Год назад +2

    it doesn't work as great at higher "LATITUDES" not "ALTITUDES". Great presentation, graphics and production values! Keep doing this!!!

  • @mitchk176
    @mitchk176 Год назад

    Another video I didn't know I needed until I saw it.

  • @andytroo
    @andytroo Год назад +2

    no idea what it is called, but the orbit of Lucy, which visits both sets of Trojan asteroids every 8 years is quite funky ...

    • @bbbnuy3945
      @bbbnuy3945 Год назад

      yea Lucy has a super clever -albeit funky orbital path. not sure if it has a name coined, but the spacecraft’s trajectory is a heliocentric orbital path which, has been described as pretzel-like.

  • @3komma141592653
    @3komma141592653 4 месяца назад

    Didn't knew i need this tier list, but i did.

  • @DrTWG
    @DrTWG 4 месяца назад

    I'm only a medical Dr but I found the ' Newtonian cannonball ' a more gentle intro to orbits than the spacetime explanation. Can't help noting the pervasiveness of 'tier-lists' for pretty much _everything_ (case in point) - especially among younger people . All must be ranked . Perhaps I might dare to hope that this could be a 'mid tier' comment.

  • @bbbnuy3945
    @bbbnuy3945 Год назад

    Hey James amazing video. Great production quality, and humor too!
    One correction is that GPS doesn’t use triangulation- they use trilateration to calculate precise position, elevation too. The difference is that triangulation measures angles from 3 different points to work out position, whereas trilateration measures distance (using speed of light travel times) to the GPS receiver to pinpoint x,y,z location. Trilateration requires 4 satellites, yet it still has tri as a prefix.. weird right?
    Anyways thanks for the video, and for blessing us with top tier content ^.^

  • @WatanabeNoTsuna.
    @WatanabeNoTsuna. Год назад

    The amount of jokes and level of snark on this video are through the roof, and I love it! 😂

  • @wtfuchattin
    @wtfuchattin Год назад

    Space - ✅
    Memes - ✅
    Randomly popping up in my RUclips recommendations - ✅
    A tier list on a subject I know nothing about - ✅
    This video really does have it all.

  • @samuelspace101
    @samuelspace101 4 месяца назад +2

    I find it funny how you just ignored L3 in the Lagrange orbit ( 9:49 ), it’s actually a really interesting one so I wanted to talk about it.
    The L3 Lagrange orbit is a theoretical unstable orbit where small objects pulled by the sun and earth will orbit perfectly behind the sun at all times, usually used in science fiction as Planet X (sadly it’s to unstable to hold a planet and it would have a gravitational background we would notice so no Planet X 😢). L3 can be used to track and observe the far side of the sun and can also be used as a place to observe asteroids we can’t see because of the sun, it would also be a good location to hide out of site so if there’s any space pirates out there needing to hide start taking notes. Over all L3 is one of the most unstable of the 5 and would need constant adjustment just like L1 and L2, but it is pretty interesting to imagine there’s something out there we can’t see.

    • @Bigglesworth_OWeezer
      @Bigglesworth_OWeezer 4 месяца назад

      I am also super interested in the L3 point! I was confused by what he said about about the space station that doesnt exist. I felt that the text over the kerbals, yzc0p5qh2cw, was something important but no, its the unique youtube url for a fucking vaporwave rick roll. Dude got me so good.

  • @rociolahere6637
    @rociolahere6637 4 месяца назад

    This is awsome 😊

  • @junovzla
    @junovzla Год назад

    6:11 nice HitchHiker's Guide to the Galaxy reference

  • @BerzerkaDurk
    @BerzerkaDurk 4 месяца назад +1

    One small gripe: There are Lagrange points in any parent/satellite orbital system, not just the Sun-Earth system.

  • @tranhongson024
    @tranhongson024 Год назад

    Very cool

  • @Techischannel
    @Techischannel Год назад +1

    The lagrange orbits are deffi the most interesting, a perfect place to park stuff like more permanent space habitats.

  • @user-ul5pt1yb8z
    @user-ul5pt1yb8z 4 месяца назад

    Thanks a lot