The following is a list of different geocentric orbit classifications.
Altitude classifications satellites. ;
Transatmospheric orbit (TAO): Geocentric orbits with altitudes at
apogee higher than and
perigee that intersects with the
defined atmosphere. ;
Low Earth orbit (LEO) : Geocentric orbits ranging in altitude from to above
mean sea level. At 160 km, one revolution takes approximately 90 minutes, and the circular orbital speed is . ;
Medium Earth orbit (MEO) : Geocentric orbits with altitudes at apogee ranging between and that of the
geosynchronous orbit at . ;
Geosynchronous orbit (GSO): Geocentric circular orbit with an altitude of . The period of the orbit equals one
sidereal day, coinciding with the rotation period of the Earth. The speed is approximately . ;
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 .
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. ;
Elliptic orbit : An orbit with an
eccentricity greater than 0 and less than 1 whose orbit traces the path of an
ellipse. :;
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. :;
Geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO) : 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. :;
Highly elliptical orbit (HEO) : Geocentric orbit with apogee above 35,786 km and low perigee (about 1,000 km) that result in long dwell times near apogee. ::;
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 Earth. ::;
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 Earth. ;
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 ;
Semi-synchronous orbit (SSO) : An orbit with an altitude of approximately and an
orbital period of approximately 12 hours. ;
Geosynchronous orbit (GEO) : Orbits with an altitude of approximately . 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. ::; Earth orbital
libration points : The
libration points for objects orbiting Earth are at 105 degrees west and 75 degrees east. More than 160 satellites are gathered at these two points. :;
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, disposal orbit, junk orbit : An orbit a few hundred kilometers above
geosynchronous that satellites are moved into at the end of their operation.
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 ,
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. ;
Sub-orbital flight : A launch where a
spacecraft approaches the height of orbit but lacks the
velocity to sustain it. ==See also==