From: Eugene Leitl (eugene.leitl@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)
Date: Sun Jul 25 1999 - 22:11:20 MDT
Technotranscendence writes:
> > Eugene, get useful at orbit mechanics! It really isnt that difficult.
It's at the bottom of my todo list somewhere. But the list just grows,
never shrinks, so probably I'll never come around to do it.
> > The equations are all pretty straightforward, muuuch simpler
> > than unix coding that so many on this list can do in their sleep
There are different kinds of intelligence, and for some people
mathematics is just hard. Fortunately, there is some nice sofware like
Mathematica and Numpy out there, which can somewhat compensate. Also,
I believe the fastest way to gain an intuitive understanding for
orbital mechanics is to write an interactive Newtonian/gravitation
simulator, and then just fumble with system parameters. Understanding
how multiple gravity-assisted flybys work is difficult on paper
anyway.
> > (Im not one of those), and those equations allow one to separate
> > the goofy ideas from the good ones. {8-] spike
>
> Well, not that orbital mechanics is all that useful for Earthbound folk, but
> I have noticed that lots of intelligent people in the computer field --
> people who can analyze problems, create elegant designs and solutions, even
> anticipate defects and usage -- do not like or cannot do mathematics about
> an algebra level.
>
> Any ideas on why this is so? Can it be rectified? Should it be rectified?
I don't think much can be done about it without fumbling inside your
skull at cellular/molecular level. For now, having a great teacher is
as good as it gets. Not everybody is a Feynman.
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