1 / 23

Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Space platform and Orbits Introduction to Remote Sensing Instructor: Dr. Cheng-Chien Liu Department of Earth Sciences National Cheng Kung University Last updated: 11 October 2004. Platform of remote sensing . Various platform

leia
Download Presentation

Chapter 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Space platform and Orbits Introduction to Remote Sensing Instructor: Dr. Cheng-Chien Liu Department of Earth Sciences National Cheng Kung University Last updated: 11 October 2004

  2. Platform of remote sensing • Various platform • Towers, balloons, model aircraft, kites, helicopter (Fig), light aircraft, jet aircraft, reconnaissance aircraft, low-earth orbit satellite, geostationary satellite, … • Range and altitude (see Fig 10.1 in Rees 2001) • Concept of multistage of remote sensing (Fig 1.21) • Our focus

  3. Aircraft • Characteristics • Operation: convenient and flexible • Routes, time, speed, … • Restriction of weather condition • Range of payload • Altitude • Spatial resolution • Disadvantages • Duration • Spatial coverage • Position • GPS (global position system) • GCPs (ground control points) • Motion • Fig

  4. Satellite • Characteristics • Temporally homogeneous observation • Spatial coverage • Stability • Disadvantages • Expensive • Flexibility • Spatial resolution • Debate on the replacement of airborne remote sensing by satellite remote sensing

  5. Launch of satellite • Traditional approach – rocket • New approach 1: space shuttle • New approach 2: • The X prize

  6. Traditional approach – rocket • Fuel • Classical mechanics • Increasing speed Dv by burning a mass Mf of fuel • where u is the speed of the exhaust gases relative to the rocket, Mi is the initial mass

  7. Traditional approach – rocket (cont.) • Placing a satellite in orbit • Way 1: (see Fig 10.3 in Rees 2001) • Launch vertically upwards • Increase an orbit velocity • Example • R = 7200 km • RE = 6400 km • GM = 3.986 x 1014 m3 s-2 • Dv1 = 3.7 m s-1 • Dv2 = 7.5 m s-1 • Dv = 11.2 m s-1

  8. Traditional approach – rocket (cont.) • Placing a satellite in orbit (cont.) • Way 2: (see Fig 10.4 in Rees 2001) • Launch tangentially • Increase an circular orbit velocity • Example • R = 7200 km • RE = 6400 km • GM = 3.986 x 1014 m3 s-2 • Dv1 = 8.2 m s-1 • Dv2 = 0.2 m s-1 • Dv = 8.4 m s-1 • Tangential speed of Earth’s surface = 0.5 • Dv = 7.9 m s-1

  9. Traditional approach – rocket (cont.) • Placing a satellite in orbit (cont.) • Rationale of having a multi-stage rocket • Dv = 8 m s-1 • u = 2.4 km • Mf / Mi= 96% • Payload < 4%

  10. The Elements of a Satellite Orbit Source: http://spaceinfo.jaxa.jp/note/eisei/e/eis04_e.html

  11. The Elements of a Satellite Orbit (cont.) • An ideal elliptical orbit • Fig 10.5 in Rees 2001 • Perigee P • Apogee A • Major axis, semi-major axis • Minor axis, semi-minor axis • Eccentricity e • b2 = a2 (1 – e2) • Period • GM = (3.98600434  0.00000002) x 1014 m3 s-2

  12. The Elements of a Satellite Orbit (cont.) • An ideal elliptical orbit (cont.) • Position of the satellite in the orbital plane • Relationship between q and t • Series expansion against e • For most artificial satellite: e < 0.01 • ∴ qt

  13. The Elements of a Satellite Orbit (cont.) • An inclined elliptical orbit • Fig 10.6 in Rees 2001 • Inclination • Prograde • Retrograde • Exact polar orbit • Near-polar orbit • Give the greatest coverage of the Earth’s surface • Widely used for low-orbit satellite • More expensive to launch • Ascending node • Ascending • Descending

  14. The Elements of a Satellite Orbit (cont.) • Sub-satellite point • Based on spherical trigonometry • Latitude b • Longitude l • Fig 10.7 in Rees 2001 • Typical sub-satellite tracks for circular orbits of inclination 600, 890, 1500 • Earth’s rotation  westwards drift of sub-satellite track

  15. Effects of the Earth’s asphericity • Earth  oblate spheroid • The gravitational potential • ae: the earth’s equatorial radius • J20.00108263: dynamical form factor • The most convenient way to describe mathematically the effect of this non-spherical Earth on the motion of a satellite is to write the gravitational potential as a sum of spherical harmonics

  16. Effects of the Earth’s asphericity • Three effects • Nodal period • Precession (see Fig 10.8 in Rees 2001) • Rotating the elliptical orbit in its own plane (Fig 10.9)

  17. Special orbits • Geostationary orbits • Place the satellite into a circular orbit above the equator • Nodal period Pn = Earth’s rotational period PE • Sidereal day = 24 /(1+1/365.24) = 23.9345 hr = 86164 s • i = 00 • e = 0 • a = 42170 km • h = 35000 km • GOES-2 visible band (Fig 6.36) • Not the full coverage but just over 810 • In practice, 550 - 650

  18. Special orbits (cont.) • Geo-synchronous orbits • Place a satellite in a geostationary orbit above a point that is not located on the equator • Nodal period Pn = Earth’s rotational period PE • Sidereal day = 24 /(1+1/365.24) = 23.9345 hr = 86164 s • i 00 • The sub-satellite path: figure-of-eight pattern • Not used in remote sensing

  19. Special orbits (cont.) • Molniya orbits • Select orbital parameters  highly eccentric with apogee positioned above the desired point  spend longer on station than in the wrong hemisphere • i = 63.40 or 116.60 • Nodal period Pn = ½ Earth’s rotational period PE • a = 26560 km • If Pn = PEand small e unhelpful large distance of apogee • Example • e = 0.74 • Perigee distance = 6900 km, apogee distance = 46200 km • Sub-satellite track of Molniya orbit (see Fig 10.12 in Rees 2001) • On station for 8 hours  three satellite can provide continuous coverage

  20. Special orbits (cont.) • Low Earth orbits • Widely used • Increasing spatial resolution at the expense of reduced coverage • Range • van Allen belt • Sun-synchronous orbit • Precess about the Earth’s polar axis at the same rate (one revolution per year) that the Earth orbits the Sun • Mean angular speed WS = 2p per year = 1.991  10-7 s-1 • Inclination and nodal period for circular sun-synchronous orbits(see Fig 10.14 in Rees 2001)

  21. Special orbits (cont.) • Low Earth orbits (cont.) • Advantages of Sun-synchronous orbit • View a large fraction of the Earth’s surface • Cross the same latitude at the same local solar time

  22. Special orbits (cont.) • Exactly repeating orbits

  23. Homework • C-prize • Describe an innovative way of remote sensing that could be deployed in the future • Explain the feasibility of your idea • Derive all equations that were used for placing a satellite in orbit • The altitude of TERRA orbit is 705 km. Please calculate the required inclination to achieve a circular sun-synchronous orbit.

More Related