In my experience in KSP, even if all thrust is applied straight downwards, a ship's trajectory will naturally be towards the east. I assume this is why eastward gravity turns are recommended, as chances are you will naturally be moving east at your first apoapsis. However, I can't figure out why it is exactly that they point east. I assumed this was due to the Coriolis effect, but here's the catch: By my calculations, the Coriolis force points west. Fcor points in the direction of (- omega x vref), where omega is the absolute angular velocity (straight out of Kerbin's north pole), and vref is the velocity in the rotating reference frame (straight out of the equator). Have I messed up somewhere, or is there another physical effect at work here? EDIT: With help from the community, figured it out. The ship isn't deflecting eastward relative to Kerbin. The trajectory doesn't actually show where you will land, because it doesn't take Kerbin's rotation into account (as it well shouldn't, or else a geosynchronous orbit would look like a point ).