What the sphere of influence represents
The sphere of influence (SOI) is a working boundary used to decide when a spacecraft is mainly controlled by one body rather than another. It is not a physical wall. It is a modeling switch that keeps patched‑conics calculations manageable and repeatable.
Inputs that drive the radius
This calculator uses the central mass M, the orbiting mass m, and the orbital scale a. A larger m expands the region, while a larger M compresses it. The semi‑major axis acts like a lever: changing a changes the SOI proportionally.
Laplace SOI for patched-conics transfers
The Laplace SOI, r = a × (m/M)^(2/5), is widely used for interplanetary transfers. It provides a practical handoff distance between a planet-centered arc and a Sun-centered arc. It is most appropriate when the secondary is far smaller than the primary and the orbit is not strongly perturbed.
Hill radius for orbital stability
The Hill radius, r = a × (1 − e) × (m/(3M))^(1/3), is tied to three‑body dynamics. It estimates where satellites can remain bound for long periods. Because it includes (1 − e), it shrinks for eccentric orbits where perturbations peak near periapsis, which is often the limiting case.
Typical scales in the Solar System
Earth’s Laplace SOI is roughly on the scale of a million kilometers, while the Moon’s Hill region around Earth is only tens of thousands of kilometers. Giant planets have much larger SOIs due to their mass, so their moon systems occupy a broader stable zone. For small bodies like asteroids, the SOI can be tiny, making flyby geometry more sensitive.
Why eccentricity matters
Eccentricity changes the minimum separation during the orbit. At periapsis, third‑body effects are strongest, so the stable region contracts. For quick circular estimates, e = 0 is fine, but measured values improve comparisons for real moons and planets.
Practical uses for trajectory design
SOI estimates help decide when to switch reference frames, select encounter boundaries for targeting, and choose numerical step sizes. They also help interpret burns: deep inside the SOI, body-centered approximations behave better; far outside, they can mislead. When planning a capture, compare periapsis distance to the SOI radius.
Common pitfalls and best practices
Keep units consistent and use masses from the same reference set. Remember that SOI is approximate; high‑fidelity navigation uses full n‑body propagation and measured ephemerides. Treat the output as a planning range, then refine with perturbations like oblateness, radiation pressure, and atmospheric drag when relevant.