Introduction To Remote Sensing
Introduction To Remote Sensing
Sensing
Orbital Considerations
Orbital Characteristics (1)
Orbital Considerations (2)
Height vs. Life of Satellite
Equatorial Orbit
(Not very useful)
International Space Station Orbit
The station travels from west to east on an orbital inclination of 51.6°. Each orbit takes
90-93 minutes, depending on the altitude of the ISS. During that time, part of the Earth is
viewed under darkness and part under daylight. The ISS orbital altitude drops gradually
over time due to the Earth's gravitational pull and atmospheric drag. Periodic reboosts
adjust the ISS orbit. The orbit of the Space Shuttle is very similar.
http://city.jsc.nasa.gov/orbtutor/page1.htm
International Space Station Orbit
The inclination of orbits of natural or artificial satellites is measured relative to the equatorial plane
of the body they orbit if they do so close enough. The equatorial plane is the plane perpendicular to
the axis of rotation of the central body.
an inclination of 0 degrees means the orbiting body orbits the planet in its equatorial plane, in the same direction as the planet
rotates;
an inclination of 90 degrees indicates a polar orbit, in which the spacecraft passes over the north and south poles of the planet; and
an inclination of 180 degrees indicates a retrograde equatorial orbit.
Orbital Characteristics (4)
Low Earth Orbits (LEO; <2500km)
2. Polar Orbits
-Orbit in plane of Earth’s rotation
axis
-Successive orbits cross the
equator at different times
-Preferred for missions intended to
view longitudinal zones under full
range of illumination conditions
-Nodes:
Nodes mark the intersection of the
plane of the equator and the plane of
the orbit.
N-flying =
ascending node
S-flying =
descending node
Orbital Characteristics (5)
Low Earth Orbits (LEO; <2500km)
• Altitude 200-600 km
• Inclinations: Max 62°, usually ~28° (latitude
of Cape Canaveral)
• Always in a Prograde Oblique orbit.
Vandenberg Air Force Base
16
Landsat 7
Orbital
Characteristics
Landsat Paths on Consecutive Orbits
Spacing Between Consecutive
Landsat Orbits at Equator
Complete Landsat coverage
takes 15 days
251paths/14 orbits per day = ~18 days for repeat coverage
233 paths/ 14.5 orbits per day = ~15 days for repeat coverage
Eccentricity
The eccentricity of a satellite's orbit is defined as the ratio of the satellite orbit's
focus length (c) to the orbit's semi-major axis (average orbit radius) (a). It defines
how elliptical the orbit is, and defines the orbit height at both the apogee and
perigee points.
The eccentricity of a satellite's orbit (or any orbit for that matter) is a unitless
value that ranges from 0 (perfectly circular) to 1 (parabolic). All of Earth's
artificial satellites have orbit eccentricities of between 0 and 1. Within a TLE
(Two Line Element) file, the decimal point is not present, but is always assumed
to be placed before the first number, even if it is a zero.
Aqua and Terra Satellites
To cover the entire Earth, four GOES would be needed. However, other parts of
the world are monitored by other systems. As of late 2006, GOES-11 and GOES-
12 are operating, with GOES-9 and GOES-10 also in orbit serving as back-up.
• The GOES-8 sounder has a visible band and 18 thermal bands, which
are sensitive to temperature variations related to CO2, ozone, and
water vapor at different atmospheric levels. We can convert each band
into an image, to which we assign colors, to identify thermal
differences, as demonstrated in this panel of images taken on May 5,
1997.