Has a TLE been posted somewhere for the Tesla Roadster in its new orbit out past Mars? I was hoping to paste it into SN7. Thanks
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$\begingroup$ SN7 is in the UK, i will be hard to paste orbital elements there. Or is SN7 something different? If so, can you add a link? Thanks! $\endgroup$– uhohFeb 12, 2018 at 5:07
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1$\begingroup$ Possible duplicate of Has a TLE ever been issued for a spacecraft trajectory not bound to Earth orbit? $\endgroup$– uhohFeb 12, 2018 at 7:49
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$\begingroup$ The only ambiguity in closing this question is to decide if No, TLEs not issued for spacecraft not bound to Earth or perhaps Horizons can be used to find Roadster's orbital elements, or some other answer. $\endgroup$– uhohFeb 12, 2018 at 7:56
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1$\begingroup$ Pardon the novice question, but what do the acronyms TLE and SN7 mean? $\endgroup$– Dan SorensenFeb 12, 2018 at 8:07
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1$\begingroup$ Sorry SN7 as I used it is for the program Starry Night Pro version 7. I was hoping to use it to plot the orbit of the Tesla Roadster. $\endgroup$– JohnFeb 20, 2018 at 21:34
2 Answers
They're available on JPL Horizons. Here is a simulation of the Tesla's orbit I made using Horizons data, described further here:
If you want the orbital elements or state vectors at any point in time, make sure the simulation is paused, then menu Objects > Edit Orbital Elements or Edit State Vectors will show them to you.
TLEs are only for Earth orbiting objects. The best source of raw data is JPL Horizons. I don't know how you might put that in to SN7, but...
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It might be better to point to where these have been already answered in much greater detail than to post a terse re-answer. The site is better when we work hard to point to the best answers. I know you've been extremely busy with this site for the last week, maybe better to let someone else with more time answer than to answer quickly? I've added a close vote and comment above. $\endgroup$– uhohFeb 12, 2018 at 7:58