Types of Orbit
Types of Orbit
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An orbit is a regular, repeating path that an object in space takes around another one. An object
moving around a planet in an orbit is called a satellite. According to the height of satellites from the
earth, the orbits can be classified as High Earth orbit, Medium Earth orbit, and Low Earth
orbit.
High Earth orbit begins about one-tenth of the way to the moon. Many kinds of weather and
some communications satellites tend to have a high Earth orbit, furthest away from the
surface.
Satellites that orbit in a medium (mid) Earth orbit include navigation satellites, designed to
monitor a particular region.
Most scientific satellites, including NASA’s Earth Observing System fleet, have a low Earth
orbit.
Height of Satellite
The height of the orbit, or distance between the satellite and Earth’s surface, determines how
quickly the satellite moves around the Earth. Higher a satellite’s orbit, the slower it
moves.
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An Earth-orbiting satellite’s motion is mostly controlled by Earth’s gravity. As satellites get
closer to Earth, the pull of gravity gets stronger, and the satellite moves more quickly.
For Example, NASA’s Aqua satellite requires about 99 minutes to orbit the Earth at
about 705 kilometres height from Earth’s surface.
A communication satellite about 36,000 kilometres from Earth’s surface takes 23
hours, 56 minutes, and 4 seconds to complete an orbit.
At 384,403 kilometres from the centre of the Earth, the Moon completes a single orbit
in 28 days.
Changing a satellite’s height will also change its orbital speed, which represents a
strange paradox.
If a satellite operator wants to increase the satellite’s orbital speed, he can’t simply
fire the thrusters to accelerate the satellite. Doing so would boost the orbit
(increase the altitude), which would slow the orbital speed.
Instead, he must fire the thrusters in a direction opposite to the satellite’s forward
motion. This change will push the satellite into a lower orbit, which will increase
its forward velocity.
The same action that on the ground would slow a moving vehicle.
Eccentricity of Orbit
Eccentricity refers to the shape of the orbit. A satellite with a low eccentricity orbit moves in a
near circle around the Earth.
An eccentric orbit is elliptical, with the satellite’s distance from Earth changing depending on
where it is in its orbit.
Note:
The eccentricity (e) of an orbit indicates the deviation of the orbit from a perfect circle.
A circular orbit has an eccentricity of 0, while a highly eccentric orbit is closer to (but always
less than) 1.
A satellite in an eccentric orbit moves around one of the ellipse’s focal points, not the centre.
Inclination of Orbit
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At this altitude, the satellite enters a sort of “sweet spot” in which its orbit matches Earth’s
rotation. This special, high Earth orbit is called geosynchronous.
A satellite in a circular geosynchronous orbit directly over the equator (eccentricity and
inclination at zero) will have a geostationary orbit that does not move at all relative to
the ground.
This is because the satellite orbits at the same speed that the Earth is turning, it is
always directly over the same place on the Earth’s surface.
Use of a geostationary orbit is extremely valuable for weather monitoring and
communication (phones, television, radio) because satellites in this orbit
provide a constant view of the same surface.
Finally, many high Earth-orbiting satellites monitor solar activity, track
magnetic and radiation levels in space around them.
Note:
Other orbital “sweet spots,” just beyond high Earth orbit, are the Lagrange points.
At the Lagrange points, the pull of gravity from the Earth cancels out the pull of gravity from
the Sun.
Anything placed at these points will feel equally pulled toward the Earth and the Sun and will
revolve with the Earth around the Sun.
Lagrange Points
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The first Lagrange point is located between the Earth and the Sun, giving satellites at this
point a constant view of the Sun.
The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), a NASA and European Space Agency
satellite tasked to monitor the Sun, orbits the first Lagrange point, about 1.5 million
kilometres away from Earth.
The second Lagrange point is about the same distance from the Earth but is located behind
the Earth. Earth is always between the second Lagrange point and the Sun.
Since the Sun and Earth are in a single line, satellites at this location only need one heat
shield to block heat and light from the Sun and Earth.
It is a good location for space telescopes, including the future James Webb Space
Telescope.
The third Lagrange point is opposite the Earth on the other side of the Sun so that the Sun is
always between it and Earth.
A satellite in this position would not be able to communicate with Earth.
The extremely stable fourth and fifth Lagrange points are in Earth’s orbital path around the
Sun, 60 degrees ahead of and behind Earth.
The twin Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) spacecraft will orbit at the
fourth and fifth Lagrange points to provide a three-dimensional view of the Sun.
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Molniya Orbit
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Path of a Polar Orbit
Just as the geosynchronous satellites have a sweet spot over the equator that lets them stay
over one spot on Earth, the polar-orbiting satellites have a sweet spot that allows them to stay
in one time.
This orbit is a Sun-synchronous orbit, which means that whenever and wherever the satellite
crosses the equator, the local solar time on the ground is always the same.
For example, if a polar satellite at 10:30 in the morning crosses the equator in Brazil
when the satellite comes around the Earth in its next overpass about 99 minutes later, it
crosses over the equator in Ecuador or Colombia at about 10:30 local time.
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