Diagram showing the orientation of a Sun-synchronous orbit (green) at four points in the year. A non-Sun-synchronous orbit (magenta) is also shown for reference. Dates are shown in white: day/month.
A sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), also called a heliosynchronous orbit,[1] is a nearly polar orbit around a planet, in which the satellite passes over any given point of the planet's surface at the same local mean solar time.[2][3] More technically, it is an orbit arranged so that it precesses through one complete revolution each year, so it always maintains the same relationship with the Sun. A Sun-synchronous orbit is useful for imaging, spy, and weather satellites,[4] because every time that the satellite is overhead, the surface illumination angle on the planet underneath it will be nearly the same.
Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO) is a particular kind of polar orbit. Satellites in SSO, travelling over the polar regions, are synchronous with the Sun. This means they are synchronised to always be in the same ‘fixed’ position relative to the Sun.
- Synchronous orbit A satellite orbit where the orbital period is equal to, or multiples of, the Earth's rotational period; i.e. Makingone, two, three, etc., orbits in a 24-hour period.
- The L6 Handbook tells us, “for a nominal sun-synchronous orbit ( i.e., one that precesses at a rate of 0.9856°/day or 360°/year), the scene and spacecraft illumination conditions vary throughout the year but repeat on a yearly cycle. The changes during the year occur because apparent Sun motion in the ecliptic plane is non-uniform, whereas.
Applications[edit]
A Sun-synchronous orbit is useful for imaging, spy, and weather satellites,[4] because every time that the satellite is overhead, the surface illumination angle on the planet underneath it will be nearly the same. This consistent lighting is a useful characteristic for satellites that image the Earth's surface in visible or infrared wavelengths, such as weather and spy satellites; and for other remote-sensing satellites, such as those carrying ocean and atmospheric remote-sensing instruments that require sunlight. For example, a satellite in Sun-synchronous orbit might ascend across the equator twelve times a day each time at approximately 15:00 mean local time.
Diagram showing a Sun-synchronous orbit from a top view of the ecliptic plane with Local Solar Time (LST) zones for reference and a descending node of 10:30 am. The LST zones show how the local time beneath the satellite varies at different latitudes and different points on its orbit.
Special cases of the Sun-synchronous orbit are the noon/midnight orbit, where the local mean solar time of passage for equatorial latitudes is around noon or midnight, and the dawn/dusk orbit, where the local mean solar time of passage for equatorial latitudes 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 that 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 PROBA2, affording them a nearly continuous view of the Sun.
Orbital precession[edit]
A Sun-synchronous orbit is achieved by having the osculating orbital plane precess (rotate) approximately one degree eastward each day with respect to the celestial sphere to keep pace with the Earth's movement around the Sun.[5] This precession is achieved by tuning the inclination to the altitude of the orbit (see Technical details) such that Earth's equatorial bulge, which perturbs inclined orbits, 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 around Earth are about 600–800 km in altitude, with periods in the 96–100-minute range, and inclinations of around 98°. This is slightly retrograde compared to the direction of Earth's rotation: 0° represents an equatorial orbit, and 90° represents a polar orbit.[5]
Sun-synchronous orbits are possible around other oblate planets, such as Mars. A satellite orbiting a planet such as Venus that is almost spherical will need an outside push to maintain a Sun-synchronous orbit.
Technical details[edit]
The angular precession per orbit for an Earth orbiting satellite is given by
where
- J2 is the coefficient for the second zonal term (1.08263×10−3) related to the oblateness of the Earth (see geopotential model),
- RE is the mean radius of the Earth, roughly 6378km
- p is the semi-latus rectum of the orbit,
- i is the inclination of the orbit to the equator.
An orbit will be Sun-synchronous when the precession rate ρ equals the mean motion of the Earth about the Sun, which is 360° per sidereal year (1.99096871×10−7rad/s), so we must set ΔΩ/T = ρ, where T is the orbital period.
As the orbital period of a spacecraft is
where a is the semi-major axis of the orbit and μ is the standard gravitational parameter of the planet (398600.440 km3/s2 for Earth); as p ≈ a for a circular or almost circular orbit, it follows that
or when ρ is 360° per year,
As an example, for a = 7200 km (the spacecraft about 800 km over the Earth surface) one gets with this formula a Sun-synchronous inclination of 98.696°.
Note that according to this approximation cos i equals −1 when the semi-major axis equals 12352 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 = 12352 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 < 12352 km but a > 12352 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 (h) | Height above Earth's surface (km) | Maximal latitude | Incli- nation | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | 1+1/2 | = 1:30 | 000274 | 83.4° | 096.6° |
15 | 1+3/5 | = 1:36 | 000567 | 82.3° | 097.7° |
14 | 1+5/7 | ≈ 1:43 | 000894 | 81.0° | 099.0° |
13 | 1+11/13 | ≈ 1:51 | 001262 | 79.3° | 100.7° |
12 | 2 | 001681 | 77.0° | 103.0° | |
11 | 2+2/11 | ≈ 2:11 | 002162 | 74.0° | 106.0° |
10 | 2+2/5 | = 2:24 | 002722 | 69.9° | 110.1° |
09 | 2+2/3 | = 2:40 | 003385 | 64.0° | 116.0° |
08 | 3 | 004182 | 54.7° | 125.3° | |
07 | 3+3/7 | ≈ 3:26 | 005165 | 37.9° | 142.1° |
When one says that a Sun-synchronous orbit goes over a spot on the Earth at the same local time each time, this refers to mean solar time, not to apparent solar time. The Sun will not be in exactly the same position in the sky during the course of the year (see Equation of time and Analemma).
Sun-synchronous orbits are mostly selected for Earth observation satellites, with an altitude typically between 600 and 1000 km over the Earth surface. Even if an orbit remains Sun-synchronous, however, other orbital parameters such as argument of periapsis and the orbital eccentricity will evolve, due to higher order perturbations in the Earth's gravitational field, the pressure of sunlight, and other causes. Earth observation satellites, in particular, prefer orbits with constant altitude when passing over the same spot. Careful selection of eccentricity and location of perigee reveals specific combinations where the perturbations largely cancel and hence the orbit is relatively stable – a frozen orbit. The ERS-1, ERS-2 and Envisat of European Space Agency, as well as the MetOp spacecraft of EUMETSAT and RADARSAT-2 of the Canadian Space Agency, are all operated in such Sun-synchronous frozen orbits.[6]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Tscherbakova, N. N.; Beletskii, V. V.; Sazonov, V. V. (1999). 'Stabilization of heliosynchronous orbits of an Earth's artificial satellite by solar pressure'. Cosmic Research. 37 (4): 393–403. Bibcode:1999KosIs..37..417S.
- ^'SATELLITES AND ORBITS'(PDF).
- ^'Types of Orbits'. marine.rutgers.edu. Retrieved 2017-06-24.
- ^ abOur Changing Planet: The View from Space (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. 2007. pp. 339. ISBN978-0521828703.
- ^ abRosengren, M. (November 1992). 'ERS-1 - An Earth Observer that exactly follows its Chosen Path'. ESA Bulletin (72). Bibcode:1992ESABu..72...76R.
- ^Rosengren, Mats (1989). 'Improved technique for Passive Eccentricity Control (AAS 89-155)'. Advances in the Astronautical Sciences. 69. AAS/NASA. Bibcode:1989ommd.proc...49R.
Further reading[edit]
- Sandwell, David T., The Gravity Field of the Earth - Part 1 (2002) (p. 8)
- Sun-Synchronous Orbit dictionary entry, from U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission
- Boain, Ronald J. (February 2004). 'The A-B-Cs of Sun Synchronous Orbit Design'(PDF). Space Flight Mechanics Conference. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2007-10-25.
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sun-synchronous_orbit&oldid=1014630408'
A Sun-synchronous orbit matches the rate at which the Earth goes around the Sun. It is a low-Earth orbit.
Advantage: consistent lighting conditions of the Earth’s surface enable us to compare images from the same season over several years
Altitude: typically 600–800 km
Satellite period: 96–100 minutes
Synchronous Orbit Moon
Satellite examples: Landsat 7, CloudSat
Transcript
Dr Allan McInnes
Sun-synchronous orbit is a special kind of orbit. Wow, this is where we get into the complexities or orbit mechanics. So orbits are not fixed in space, they tend to change over time, and one of the things that makes an orbit change is the shape of the Earth. And in the case of the shape of the Earth, one of the changes that we see with orbits is something called precession of the orbit, and precession basically means that the orbit moves relative to the Earth over time. So you’re not just orbiting around the Earth – the circle of the orbit is actually shifting in space as well.
Normally that’s something that we either ignore or counter the effects of by manoeuvring the spacecraft. But with a Sun-synchronous orbit, what we actually try to do is take advantage of that. If we pick the right altitude and the right inclination relative to the equator, we can actually get a precession rate at which that orbit changes that just happens to exactly match the rate at which the Earth goes around the Sun.
And what that means is that, if we put a spacecraft into an orbit where, when it initially takes off and is flying around the Earth, it spends part of its time directly over a point that’s seeing midday Sun and the other half of its orbit over the side of the Earth where it’s exactly at midnight, we’re going to maintain that all the way through the year, because as the Earth moves around the Sun, the orbit’s also shifting. If we weren’t in a Sun-synchronous orbit, then we might start out seeing noon and midnight and then later in the year we’d be seeing some other time of day, and it would change over time.
Synchronous Orbit Calculator
With the Sun-synchronous orbit, we’re locked to the Sun essentially, and so if we start out seeing noon and midnight, we’ll always see noon and midnight. And that can be quite useful for observation and scientific missions where we want to get consistent lighting conditions on the ground. So if we always want to be over something with nice bright midday Sun then we’ll make sure we always see that with the Sun-synchronous orbit.