Messierhunter
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I'm working on a spreadsheet to calculate the approximate longitude, latitude, and altitude of a given satellite (in this case, the Hubble Space Telescope) based on the two line elements. I've checked my work with Orbiter and while I'm close I'm still a bit off somewhere between "true longitude" and "geocentric longitude." Latitude matches up perfectly with orbiter, no problems there. So does the true anomaly and true longitude according to the scenario editor's orbital elements editing function, it's a perfect match with my calculations. Geocentric or "geographic" longitude is the tricky bit, it's consistently just a few degrees off the way I'm doing it and I can't seem to figure out why. There must be some factor I'm overlooking, and it appears larger than I would expect precession, nutation or other minor effects to be. I couldn't find a formula for it so I tried to figure it out on my own which is no doubt where I'm making a mistake and overlooking some factor. I expressed it simply as the true longitude minus greenwich mean sidereal time - switching to greenwich sideral time (not mean sidereal time) doesn't seem to make a dent in the difference which is about 2-3 degrees different from what orbiter is telling me despite the simulation being paused at startup and the same time being entered on the spreadsheet. Any thoughts on what I'm doing wrong?