Geocentric Orbit

A geocentric orbit, Earth-centered orbit, or Earth orbit involves any object orbiting Earth, such as the Moon or artificial satellites.

In 1997, NASA estimated there were approximately 2,465 artificial satellite payloads orbiting Earth and 6,216 pieces of space debris as tracked by the Goddard Space Flight Center. More than 16,291 objects previously launched have undergone orbital decay and entered Earth's atmosphere.

A spacecraft enters orbit when its centripetal acceleration due to gravity is less than or equal to the centrifugal acceleration due to the horizontal component of its velocity. For a low Earth orbit, this velocity is about 7.8 km/s (28,100 km/h; 17,400 mph); by contrast, the fastest crewed airplane speed ever achieved (excluding speeds achieved by deorbiting spacecraft) was 2.2 km/s (7,900 km/h; 4,900 mph) in 1967 by the North American X-15. The energy required to reach Earth orbital velocity at an altitude of 600 km (370 mi) is about 36 MJ/kg, which is six times the energy needed merely to climb to the corresponding altitude.

Spacecraft with a perigee below about 2,000 km (1,200 mi) are subject to drag from the Earth's atmosphere, which decreases the orbital altitude. The rate of orbital decay depends on the satellite's cross-sectional area and mass, as well as variations in the air density of the upper atmosphere. Below about 300 km (190 mi), decay becomes more rapid with lifetimes measured in days. Once a satellite descends to 180 km (110 mi), it has only hours before it vaporizes in the atmosphere. The escape velocity required to pull free of Earth's gravitational field altogether and move into interplanetary space is about 11.2 km/s (40,300 km/h; 25,100 mph).

List of terms and concepts

Types

The following is a list of different geocentric orbit classifications.

Altitude classifications

Geocentric Orbit 
Low (cyan) and Medium (yellow) Earth orbit regions to scale. The black dashed line is the geosynchronous orbit. The green dashed line is the 20,230 km orbit used for GPS satellites.

    Transatmospheric orbit (TAO)
    Geocentric orbits with altitudes at apogee higher than 100 km (62 mi) and perigee that intersects with the defined atmosphere.
    Low Earth orbit (LEO)
    Geocentric orbits ranging in altitude from 160 km (100 mi) to 2,000 km (1,200 mi) above mean sea level. At 160 km, one revolution takes approximately 90 minutes, and the circular orbital speed is 8 km/s (26,000 ft/s).
    Medium Earth orbit (MEO)
    Geocentric orbits with altitudes at apogee ranging between 2,000 km (1,200 mi) and that of the geosynchronous orbit at 35,786 km (22,236 mi).
    Geosynchronous orbit (GEO)
    Geocentric circular orbit with an altitude of 35,786 km (22,236 mi). The period of the orbit equals one sidereal day, coinciding with the rotation period of the Earth. The speed is approximately 3 km/s (9,800 ft/s).
    High Earth orbit (HEO)
    Geocentric orbits with altitudes at apogee higher than that of the geosynchronous orbit. A special case of high Earth orbit is the highly elliptical orbit, where altitude at perigee is less than 2,000 km (1,200 mi).

Inclination classifications

Eccentricity classifications

    Hyperbolic trajectory
    An "orbit" with eccentricity greater than 1. The object's velocity reaches some value in excess of the escape velocity, therefore it will escape the gravitational pull of the Earth and continue to travel infinitely with a velocity (relative to Earth) decelerating to some finite value, known as the hyperbolic excess velocity.
      Escape Trajectory
      This trajectory must be used to launch an interplanetary probe away from Earth, because the excess over escape velocity is what changes its heliocentric orbit from that of Earth.
      Capture Trajectory
      This is the mirror image of the escape trajectory; an object traveling with sufficient speed, not aimed directly at Earth, will move toward it and accelerate. In the absence of a decelerating engine impulse to put it into orbit, it will follow the escape trajectory after periapsis.
    Parabolic trajectory
    An "orbit" with eccentricity exactly equal to 1. The object's velocity equals the escape velocity, therefore it will escape the gravitational pull of the Earth and continue to travel with a velocity (relative to Earth) decelerating to 0. A spacecraft launched from Earth with this velocity would travel some distance away from it, but follow it around the Sun in the same heliocentric orbit. It is possible, but not likely that an object approaching Earth could follow a parabolic capture trajectory, but speed and direction would have to be precise.

Directional classifications

    Prograde 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

Special classifications

Non-geocentric classifications

Tangential velocities at altitude

Orbit Center-to-center
distance
Altitude above
the Earth's surface
Speed Orbital period Specific orbital energy
Earth's own rotation at surface (for comparison— not an orbit) 6,378 km 0 km 465.1 m/s (1,674 km/h or 1,040 mph) 23 h 56 min 4.09 sec −62.6 MJ/kg
Orbiting at Earth's surface (equator) theoretical 6,378 km 0 km 7.9 km/s (28,440 km/h or 17,672 mph) 1 h 24 min 18 sec −31.2 MJ/kg
Low Earth orbit 6,600–8,400 km 200–2,000 km
  • Circular orbit: 7.7–6.9 km/s (27,772–24,840 km/h or 17,224–15,435 mph) respectively
  • Elliptic orbit: 10.07–8.7 km/s respectively
1 h 29 min – 2 h 8 min −29.8 MJ/kg
Molniya orbit 6,900–46,300 km 500–39,900 km 1.5–10.0 km/s (5,400–36,000 km/h or 3,335–22,370 mph) respectively 11 h 58 min −4.7 MJ/kg
Geostationary 42,000 km 35,786 km 3.1 km/s (11,600 km/h or 6,935 mph) 23 h 56 min 4.09 sec −4.6 MJ/kg
Orbit of the Moon 363,000–406,000 km 357,000–399,000 km 0.97–1.08 km/s (3,492–3,888 km/h or 2,170–2,416 mph) respectively 27.27 days −0.5 MJ/kg
Geocentric Orbit 
The lower axis gives orbital speeds of some orbits

See also

References

Tags:

Geocentric Orbit List of terms and conceptsGeocentric Orbit TypesGeocentric OrbitAtmosphere of EarthAtmospheric entryEarthGoddard Space Flight CenterMoonOrbitOrbital decaySatelliteSpace debris

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Chris JerichoWorld War IRobert DurstThree-body problemRusso-Ukrainian WarJosé MourinhoAndrew TateSouth KoreaLa LigaTaiping RebellionCanelo ÁlvarezHiroyuki SanadaThe Three-Body Problem (novel)Ottoman EmpireCatherine Zeta-JonesAnne HathawayLana Del ReyUEFA Champions LeagueDirlewanger BrigadeSaddam HusseinDeadpool 2Teri Baaton Mein Aisa Uljha JiyaRobert F. KennedyManjummel BoysCoral Castle2024 Bondi Junction stabbingsOpinion polling for the next United Kingdom general electionAndy ColeDelta BurkeNullJoe O'Connor (snooker player)Pankaj TripathiThe First OmenXabi AlonsoWorld War IIWorld Chess Championship 2023UEFA Youth LeagueM. Night Shyamalan2024 Maldivian parliamentary election2019 Indian general electionAir France Flight 447Mia GothAFC U-23 Asian CupGhilliStripchatRishi SunakX-Men '97Israeli–Palestinian conflictYandexHyderabad Lok Sabha constituencyCandidates TournamentList of Spotify streaming recordsThe SympathizerBurj KhalifaCharles IIIKaren McDougalList of European Cup and UEFA Champions League finalsAmar Singh ChamkilaList of Indian Premier League seasons and resultsWomen's Candidates Tournament 2024Tiger WoodsNeatsville, KentuckyGreat aukList of Young Sheldon episodesNew York CityTerence CrawfordGlass (2019 film)Sigmund FreudNational Hockey LeagueZach WilsonGeorgia (country)John Wayne GacyOscar De La HoyaAlexander the GreatAnsel Adams🡆 More