Sun-synchronous orbit
The uniformity of Sun angle is achieved by tuning the inclination to the altitude of the orbit (details in section "Technical details") such that the extra mass near the equator causes the orbital plane of the spacecraft to precess with the desired rate: the plane of the orbit is not fixed in space relative to the distant stars, but rotates slowly about the Earth's axis. Typical sun-synchronous orbits are about 600–800 km in altitude, with periods in the 96–100 minute range, and inclinations of around 98° (i.e. slightly retrograde compared to the direction of Earth's rotation: 0° represents an equatorial orbit and 90° represents a polar orbit).[2]
Special cases of the sun-synchronous orbit are the noon/midnight orbit, where the local mean solar time of passage for equatorial longitudes is around noon or midnight, and the dawn/dusk orbit, where the local mean solar time of passage for equatorial longitudes is around sunrise or sunset, so that the satellite rides the terminator between day and night. Riding the terminator is useful for active radar satellites as the satellites' solar panels can always see the Sun, without being shadowed by the Earth. It is also useful for some satellites with passive instruments which need to limit the Sun's influence on the measurements, as it is possible to always point the instruments towards the night side of the Earth. The dawn/dusk orbit has been used for solar observing scientific satellites such as Yohkoh, TRACE, Hinode and Proba-2, affording them a nearly continuous view of the Sun.
Sun-synchronous orbits are possible around other oblate planets, such as Mars. But Venus, for example, is too spherical to have a satellite in sun-synchronous orbit. See the article Venus where a flattening coefficient of zero for this planet is cited.
Technical details
Equation (24) of the article Orbital perturbation analysis (spacecraft) gives the angular precession per orbit for an orbit around an oblate planet as- is the coefficient for the second zonal term (1.7555 · 1010 km5 / s2) related to the oblateness of the earth (see Geopotential model),
- is the gravitational constant of the Earth (398600.440 km3 / s2)
- is the semi-latus rectum of the orbit,
- is the inclination of the orbit to the equator.
As the orbital period of a spacecraft is (where a is the semi-major axis of the orbit) and as for a circular or almost circular orbit it follows that
Note that according to this approximation cos i equals −1 when the semi-major axis equals 12 352 km, which means that only smaller orbits can be sun-synchronous. The period can be in the range from 88 minutes for a very low orbit (a=6554 km, i=96°) to 3.8 hours (a=12 352 km, but this orbit would be equatorial with i=180°). (A period longer than 3.8 hours may be possible by using an eccentric orbit with p<12 352 km but a>12 352 km.)
If one wants a satellite to fly over some given spot on Earth every day at the same hour, it can do between 7 and 16 orbits per day, as shown in the following table. (The table has been calculated assuming the periods given. The orbital period that should be used is actually slightly longer. For instance, a retrograde equatorial orbit that passes over the same spot after 24 hours has a true period about 365/364 ≈ 1.0027 times longer than the time between overpasses. For non-equatorial orbits the factor is closer to 1.)
Orbits per day | Period (hrs) | Height above Earth's surface (km) |
Maximum latitude |
---|---|---|---|
16 | = 1 hr 30 min | 282 | 83.4° |
15 | = 1 hr 36 min | 574 | 82.3° |
14 | ≈ 1 hr 43 min | 901 | 81.0° |
13 | ≈ 1 hr 51 min | 1269 | 79.3° |
12 | 1688 | 77.0° | |
11 | ≈ 2 hrs 11 min | 2169 | 74.0° |
10 | = 2 hrs 24 min | 2730 | 69.9° |
9 | = 2 hrs 40 min | 3392 | 64.0° |
8 | 4189 | 54.7° | |
7 | ≈ 3 hrs 26 min | 5172 | 37.9° |
The Sun-synchronous orbit is mostly selected for Earth observation satellites that should be operated at a relatively constant altitude suitable for its Earth observation instruments, this altitude typically being between 600 km and 1000 km over the Earth surface. Because of the deviations of the gravitational field of the Earth from that of a homogeneous sphere that are quite significant at such relatively low altitudes a strictly circular orbit is not possible for these satellites. Very often a frozen orbit is therefore selected that is slightly higher over the Southern hemisphere than over the Northern hemisphere. ERS-1, ERS-2 and Envisat of European Space Agency as well as the MetOp spacecraft of the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites are all operated in Sun-synchronous, "frozen" orbits.[citation needed]
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