A 'geocentric orbit' is an orbit of any object
orbiting the
Earth, such as the
Moon or
artificial satellites. Currently there are approximately 2465
artificial satellites
orbiting the Earth and 6216 pieces of
space debris as tracked by the
Goddard Space Flight Center. Over 16,291 previously launched objects have
decayed into the Earth's
atmosphere.
List of Terms and Concepts
;
Analemma: a term in
astronomy used to describe the
plot of the positions of the
Sun on the
celestial sphere throughout one year. Closely resembles a figure-eight.
;
Altitude: as used here, the
height of an object above the
average surface of the
Earth's
oceans.
;
Eccentricity: a measure of how much an
orbit deviates from a perfect
circle.
Eccentricity is strictly defined for all
circular,
elliptic,
parabolic and
hyperbolic orbits.
;
Equatorial plane: as used here, an
imaginary plane extending from the equator on the
Earth to the
celestial sphere.
;
Orbital characteristics: the six
parameters of the
Keplerian elements needed to
specify that
orbit uniquely.
;
Escape velocity: as used here, the minimum
velocity an object without
propulsion needs to have to move away
indefinitely from the
earth. An object with such a
velocity will enter an
escape orbit.
;
Impulse: the product of a
force and the
time during which it acts. Measured in (
kg m/s or
N·
s).
;
Inclination: the
angle between a
reference plane and another
plane or
axis. In the sense discussed here the
reference plane is the
Earth's
equatorial plane.
;
Orbital period: as defined here, time it takes a
satellite to make one full
orbit about the
Earth.
;
Sidereal day: the time it takes for a
celestial object to rotate 360°. For the
Earth this is: 23
hours, 56
minutes, 4.091
seconds.
;
Solar time: as used here, the local time as measured by a
sundial.
;
Velocity: an object's
speed in a particular
direction. Since
velocity is defined as a
vector, both
speed and
direction are required to define it.
Geocentric Orbit Types
The following is a list of different geocentric orbit classifications.
Altitude Classifications
:'
Low Earth Orbit (LEO)' - Geocentric orbits ranging in altitude from 0 - 2000 km (0 - 1240 miles); one revolution takes 90 minutes, the speed is 8 km/s.
:'
Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)' - Geocentric orbits ranging in altitude from 2000 km - to just below
geosynchronous orbit at 35,786 km (22,240 miles). Also known as an
intermediate circular orbit.
:'
Highly Elliptical Orbit (HEO)' - Geocentric orbits with a high apogee and low perigee that result in long dwell times near perigee.
:'
Geosynchronous Orbit (GEO)' - Geocentric orbit with an altitude of 35,786 km (22,236 statute miles) above mean sea level. The period of the orbit coincides with the rotation period of the earth: 24 hours; the speed is 3 km/s.
Inclination Classifications
:'
Inclined Orbit' - An orbit whose
inclination in reference to the
equatorial plane is not 0.
:::'
Polar Orbit' - A satellite that passes above or nearly above both poles of the
planet on each revolution. Therefore it has an
inclination of (or very close to) 90
degrees.
:::'
Polar Sun-synchronous Orbit' - A nearly
polar orbit that passes the
equator at the same local time on every pass. Useful for
image taking satellites because
shadows will be the same on every pass.
Eccentricity Classifications
:'
Circular Orbit' - An
orbit that has an
eccentricity of 0 and whose path traces a
circle.
::'
Hohmann transfer orbit' - An orbital maneuver that moves a
spacecraft from one
circular orbit to another using two engine
impulses. This maneuver was named after
Walter Hohmann.
:'
Elliptic Orbit' - An
orbit with an
eccentricity greater than 0 and less than 1 whose orbit traces the path of an
ellipse.
::'
Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit' - A geocentric-
elliptic orbit where the
perigee is at the
altitude of a
Low Earth Orbit (LEO) and the
apogee at the
altitude of a
geosynchronous orbit.
::'
Geostationary Transfer Orbit' - A geocentric-
elliptic orbit where the
perigee is at the
altitude of a
Low Earth Orbit (LEO) and the
apogee at the
altitude of a
geostationary orbit.
::'
Molniya Orbit' - A
highly elliptical orbit with
inclination of 63.4° and
orbital period of ½ of a
sidereal day (roughly 12 hours). Such a satellite spends most of its time over a designated area of the
planet.
::'
Tundra Orbit' - A
highly elliptical orbit with
inclination of 63.4° and
orbital period of one
sidereal day (roughly 24 hours). Such a satellite spends most of its time over a designated area of the
planet.
:'
Hyperbolic orbit' - An
orbit with the eccentricity greater than 1. Such an orbit also has a
velocity in excess of the
escape velocity and as such, will escape the gravataional pull of the
planet and continue to travel
infinitely.
:'
Parabolic Orbit' - An
orbit with the eccentricity equal to 1. Such an orbit also has a
velocity equal to the
escape velocity and therefore will escape the gravatational pull of the
planet and travel until it's
velocity relative to the
planet is 0. If the speed of such an orbit is increased it will become a
hyperbolic orbit.
::'
Escape Orbit (EO)' - A high-speed
parabolic orbit where the object has
escape velocity and is moving away from the
planet.
::'
Capture Orbit' - A high-speed
parabolic orbit where the object has
escape velocity and is moving toward the
planet.
Directional classifications
:'
Direct orbit' - an orbit in which the projection of the object onto the equatorial plane revolves about the Earth in the same direction as the rotation of the Earth.
:'
Retrograde orbit' - an orbit in which the projection of the object onto the equatorial plane revolves about the Earth in the direction opposite that of the rotation of the Earth.
Geosynchronous Classifications
:'
Semi-Synchronous Orbit (SSO)' - An
orbit with an
altitude of approximately 20,200 km (12544.2 miles) and an
orbital period of approximately 12 hours
:'
Geosynchronous Orbit (GEO)' - Orbits with an altitude of approximately 35,786 km (22,240 miles). Such a satellite would trace an
analemma (figure 8) in the sky.
:::'
Geostationary orbit (GSO)': A
geosynchronous orbit with an
inclination of zero. To an observer on the ground this satellite would appear as a fixed point in the sky.
:::'
Clarke Orbit' - Another name for a
geostationary orbit. Named after the writer
Arthur C. Clarke.
:::'
Supersynchronous orbit' - A disposal / storage orbit above GSO/GEO. Satellites will drift west.
:::'
Subsynchronous orbit' - A drift orbit close to but below GSO/GEO. Satellites will drift east.
:::'
Graveyard Orbit' - An orbit a few hundred kilometers above
geosynchronous that satellites are moved into at the end of their operation.
::::'
Disposal Orbit' - A
synonym for
graveyard orbit.
::::'
Junk Orbit' - A
synonym for
graveyard orbit.
Special Classifications
:'
Sun-synchronous Orbit' - An orbit which combines
altitude and
inclination in such a way that the
satellite passes over any given point of the
planet's surface at the same local
solar time. Such an orbit can place a satellite in constant sunlight and is useful for
imaging,
spy, and
weather satellites.
:'
Moon Orbit' - The
orbital characteristics of
Earth's
Moon. Average
altitude of 384,403 kilometres (238,857 mi),
elliptical-
inclined orbit.
Non-geocentric Classifications
:'
Horseshoe Orbit' - An
orbit that appears to a ground observer to be orbiting a
planet but is actually in
co-orbit with it. See asteroids
3753 (Cruithne) and
2002 AA29.
:'
Exo-orbit' - A maneuver where a
spacecraft approaches the height of
orbit but lacks the
velocity to sustain it.
::'
Sub-Orbital Spaceflight' - A
synonym for
Exo-orbit.
See also
★
List of orbits
★
Astronomy
★
Astrodynamics
★
Celestial sphere
★
Orbit
★
Heliocentric orbit
★
Areosynchronous satellite
★
Areostationary satellite
★
Escape velocity
★
Satellite
References
★
Satellite Situation Report
★ http://www.freemars.org/jeff/speed/index.htm
★ http://www.tech-faq.com/medium-earth-orbit.shtml
★ http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/conghand/traject.htm
★ http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/solarsystem/second_moon_991029.html
★ http://www.astro.uwo.ca/~wiegert/3753/3753.html
★ http://www.astro.uwo.ca/~wiegert/AA29/AA29.html