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    In astrodynamics or celestial mechanics a parabolic trajectory is an orbit with the eccentricity equal to 1. When moving away from the source it is called an escape orbit, otherwise a capture orbit.

    Under standard assumptions a body traveling along an escape orbit will coast to infinity, with velocity relative to the central body tending to zero, and therefore will never return. Parabolic trajectory is a minimum-energy escape trajectory.


        Parabolic trajectory
        Velocity
            Equation of motion
            Energy
            Flight path angle
            See also

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    Velocity
    Under standard assumptions the orbital velocity (v,) of a body traveling along parabolic trajectory can be computed as:
    v=sqrt

    where:

    At any position the orbiting body has the escape velocity for that position.

    If the body has the escape velocity with respect to the Earth, this is not enough to escape the Solar System, so near the Earth the orbit resembles a parabola, but further away it bends into an elliptical orbit around the Sun.


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    This velocity (v,) is closely related to the orbital velocity of a body in a circular orbit of the radius equal to the radial position of orbiting body on the parabolic trajectory:
    v=sqrtcdot v_O

    where:

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    Equation of motion
    Under standard assumptions, for a body moving along this kind of trajectory an orbital equation becomes:
    r=

    where:
    u, is a true anomaly of the orbiting body,

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    Energy
    Under standard assumptions, specific orbital energy (epsilon,) of parabolic trajectory is zero, so the orbital energy conservation equation for this trajectory takes form:
    epsilon=-=0

    where:

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    Flight path angle


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    See also





     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Parabolic trajectory". link