orbit, as viewed from above the North Pole A satellite whose orbital period is an
integer fraction of a day (e.g., 24 hours, 12 hours, 8 hours, etc.) will follow roughly the same ground track every day. This ground track is shifted east or west depending on the
longitude of the ascending node, which can vary over time due to
perturbations of the orbit. If the period of the satellite is slightly longer than an integer fraction of a day, the ground track will shift west over time; if it is slightly shorter, the ground track will shift east. As the orbital period of a satellite increases, approaching the
rotational period of the Earth (in other words, as its average orbital speed slows towards the rotational speed of the Earth), its sinusoidal ground track will become compressed longitudinally, meaning that the "nodes" (the points at which it crosses the
equator) will become closer together until at geosynchronous orbit they lie directly on top of each other. For orbital periods
longer than the Earth's rotational period, an increase in the orbital period corresponds to a longitudinal stretching out of the (apparent retrograde) ground track. A satellite whose orbital period is
equal to the rotational period of the Earth is said to be in a
geosynchronous orbit. Its ground track will have a "figure eight" shape over a fixed location on the Earth, crossing the equator twice each day. It will track eastward when it is on the part of its orbit closest to
perigee, and westward when it is closest to
apogee. A special case of the geosynchronous orbit, the
geostationary orbit, has an
eccentricity of zero (meaning the orbit is circular), and an inclination of zero in the
Earth-Centered, Earth-Fixed coordinate system (meaning the orbital plane is not tilted relative to the Earth's equator). The "ground track" in this case consists of a single point on the Earth's equator, above which the satellite sits at all times. Note that the satellite is still orbiting the Earth — its apparent lack of motion is due to the fact that the Earth is rotating about its own
center of mass at the same rate as the satellite is orbiting. ==Effect of inclination==