File talk:Eris Orbit.svg

From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
Revision as of 22:47, 7 January 2014 by Orionist (talk | contribs) (reply to comment)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Hello, there appears to be a problem with Eris's orbit in the left hand diagram in the image. The Sun should be at one focus of the ellipse and it clearly isn't. The perihelion (the position of the closest point in the orbit to the Sun) should be at the opposite end of the orbit from the aphelion (the farthest point in the orbit), not off to one side. Look where Eris's orbit intersects Neptune's fairly circular orbit. In reality, with a perihelion of 38 AU, Eris never intersects Neptune's orbit at 30 AU. Hopefully this won't be hard to fix. WolfmanSF (talk) 08:10, 5 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Hello Wolfman. The orbit of Eris is very eccentric and has a very steep inclination of 44 degrees. The diagram is a near polar view of the ecliptic, so you're looking (almost) straight at the planet's orbits, but seeing Eris' orbit at a diagonal angle. So Eris never intersects Neptune's (or Pluto's) orbit. As for the Sun not being at the focus of the ellipse, it has to do again with the viewing angle. You'll only see it in the focus when the viewing angle is perpendicular to at least one of the axes, which is not the case here.
The reason I included three different views from different angles was these orbital properties, while one polar view of the ecliptic would suffice for a planet's orbit. You'll get a better idea of the orbit if you follow the link in the description (here it is, you need to have Java installed to work) which contains a 3d applet of the orbit that you can move and rotate, which was the source I relied upon to make this diagram. Cheers! -- Orionisttalk 22:47, 7 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]