Summary
This book is a personal account of the researches based on analysis of satellite orbits between 1957 and 1990 at the Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough, work in which I played a leading role. The book is most definitely not an impartial history of the subject world-wide: contributions by other groups are mentioned only when necessary. Nor is the book an autobiography, though the science is punctuated – and perhaps enlivened – by some personal experiences.
A book of this kind, a hybrid of science and life, presents the author with many stylistic problems. I have ruthlessly gouged out as many ‘I's as possible, and have tried to avoid mentioning too many names (with apologies to all those who find themselves liquidated). I decided to use ‘we’ quite often: throughout the book we means ‘those of us at the RAE who were concerned with or working on the problem’. Individual names are mentioned too, of course, and often the we is defined by giving the authors of a paper in a note.
I have tried to make the book widely intelligible to readers without specialized knowledge. There is a light sprinkling of mathematical equations: but if you don't like them you can skip them without losing the thread.
Most spacecraft chatter continuously, sending back to the ground stations so much data that storage can be quite a problem. The satellites selected for orbit analysis, on the other hand, are usually dumb (and deaf and blind): but they can be seen from the ground as they cross the sky, and from the observations their orbits can be determined.
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- A Tapestry of Orbits , pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992