| dvnorm_c | 
| Table of contents Proceduredvnorm_c ( Derivative of vector norm ) SpiceDouble dvnorm_c ( ConstSpiceDouble state[6] ) AbstractCalculate the derivative of the norm of a 3-vector. Required_ReadingNone. KeywordsDERIVATIVES MATH VECTOR Brief_I/O
   VARIABLE  I/O  DESCRIPTION
   --------  ---  --------------------------------------------------
   state      I   A 6-vector composed of three coordinates and their
                  derivatives.
   The function returns the derivative of the norm of the position
   component of the input `state' vector.
Detailed_Input
   state       is a double precision 6-vector, the second three
               components being the derivatives of the first three
               with respect to some scalar.
                                dx
                  state =  ( x, -- )
                                ds
               A common form for `state' would contain position and
               velocity.
Detailed_Output
   The function returns the derivative of the norm of the position
   component of the input `state' vector:
                  d ||x||
      dvnorm_c = --------
                    ds
   where the norm of x is given by:
                                   .----------------
                 .---------       /    2    2    2
      ||x|| =  \/ < x, x >  = \  / ( x1 + x2 + x3  )
                               \/
   If the velocity component of `state' is:
                dx1   dx2   dx3
         v = ( ----, ----, ---- )
                ds    ds    ds
   then
         d||x||      < x, v >
         ------ =  ------------  =  < xhat, v >
           ds        .---------
                   \/ < x, x >
ParametersNone. Exceptions
   Error free.
   1)  If the first three components of `state' ("x") describe the
       origin (zero vector) the routine returns zero as the
       derivative of the vector norm.
FilesNone. ParticularsA common use for this routine is to calculate the time derivative of the radius corresponding to a state vector. Examples
   The numerical results shown for this example may differ across
   platforms. The results depend on the SPICE kernels used as
   input, the compiler and supporting libraries, and the machine
   specific arithmetic implementation.
   1) Compute the derivative of the norm of three vectors of
      different magnitudes. Use the first two vectors to define
      the derivatives as parallel and anti-parallel, and let
      the third be the zero vector
      Example code begins here.
      /.
         Program dvnorm_ex1
      ./
      #include <math.h>
      #include <stdio.h>
      #include "SpiceUsr.h"
      int main()
         {
         /.
         Local variables.
         ./
         SpiceDouble     mag  [3] =  { -4., 4., 12. };
         SpiceDouble     x1   [3];
         SpiceDouble     y    [6];
         /.
         Initialize `x1'.
         ./
         vpack_c( 1., sqrt(2.), sqrt(3.), x1 );
         /.
         Parallel...
         ./
         y[0] = x1[0] * pow(10., mag[0] );
         y[1] = x1[1] * pow(10., mag[0] );
         y[2] = x1[2] * pow(10., mag[0] );
         y[3] = x1[0];
         y[4] = x1[1];
         y[5] = x1[2];
         printf( "Parallel x, dx/ds         : %f\n", dvnorm_c( y ) );
         /.
         ...anti-parallel...
         ./
         y[0] = x1[0] * pow(10., mag[1] );
         y[1] = x1[1] * pow(10., mag[1] );
         y[2] = x1[2] * pow(10., mag[1] );
         y[3] = -x1[0];
         y[4] = -x1[1];
         y[5] = -x1[2];
         printf( "Anti-parallel x, dx/ds    : %f\n", dvnorm_c( y ) );
         /.
         ...'x' zero vector.
         ./
         y[0] = 0.;
         y[1] = 0.;
         y[2] = 0.;
         y[3] = x1[0] * pow(10., mag[2] );
         y[4] = x1[1] * pow(10., mag[2] );
         y[5] = x1[2] * pow(10., mag[2] );
         printf( "Zero vector x, large dx/ds: %f\n", dvnorm_c( y ) );
         return 0;
      }
      When this program was executed on a Mac/Intel/cc/64-bit
      platform, the output was:
      Parallel x, dx/ds         : 2.449490
      Anti-parallel x, dx/ds    : -2.449490
      Zero vector x, large dx/ds: 0.000000
RestrictionsNone. Literature_ReferencesNone. Author_and_InstitutionJ. Diaz del Rio (ODC Space) E.D. Wright (JPL) Version
   -CSPICE Version 1.0.1, 27-AUG-2021 (JDR)
       Edited the header to comply with NAIF standard. Added example's
       problem statement. Moved the contents of the -Restrictions section
       to -Exceptions.
       Updated example code to remove non ANSI-C feature.
   -CSPICE Version 1.0.0, 04-MAY-2010 (EDW)
Index_Entriesderivative of 3-vector norm | 
Fri Dec 31 18:41:05 2021