Orbital Period: Astrodynamics
Orbital Period: Astrodynamics
Orbital Period: Astrodynamics
Part of a series on
Astrodynamics
Orbital mechanics
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Orbital elements
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eccentricity
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Equations
Celestial mechanics
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Gravitational influences
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N-body orbits
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Preflight engineering
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Efficiency measures
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Contents
1Related periods
2Small body orbiting a central body
3Effect of central body's density
4Two bodies orbiting each other
5Synodic period
6Examples of sidereal and synodic periods
o 6.1Synodic periods relative to other planets
7Binary stars
8See also
9Notes
10Bibliography
11External links
Related periods[edit]
See also: Lunar month § Types
There are many periods related to the orbits of objects, each of which are often used in
the various fields of astronomy and astrophysics. Examples of some of the common
ones include the following:
The sidereal period is the amount of time that it takes an object to make a full
orbit, relative to the stars. This is the orbital period in an inertial (non-rotating) frame
of reference.
The synodic period is the amount of time that it takes for an object to reappear
at the same point in relation to two or more other objects. In common usage, these
two objects are typically the Earth and the Sun. The time between two
successive oppositions or two successive conjunctions is also equal to the synodic
period. For celestial bodies in the solar system, the synodic period (with respect to
Earth and the Sun) differs from the sidereal period due to the Earth's motion around
the Sun. For example, the synodic period of the Moon's orbit as seen from the Earth,
relative to the Sun, is 29.5 mean solar days, since the Moon's phase and position
relative to the Sun and Earth repeats after this period. This is longer than the
sidereal period of its orbit around the Earth, which is 27.3 mean solar days, due to
the motion of the Earth around the Sun.
The draconitic period (also draconic period or nodal period), is the time that
elapses between two passages of the object through its ascending node, the point
of its orbit where it crosses the ecliptic from the southern to the northern
hemisphere. This period differs from the sidereal period because both the orbital
plane of the object and the plane of the ecliptic precess with respect to the fixed
stars, so their intersection, the line of nodes, also precesses with respect to the fixed
stars. Although the plane of the ecliptic is often held fixed at the position it occupied
at a specific epoch, the orbital plane of the object still precesses causing the
draconitic period to differ from the sidereal period. [1]
The anomalistic period is the time that elapses between two passages of an
object at its periapsis (in the case of the planets in the Solar System, called
the perihelion), the point of its closest approach to the attracting body. It differs from
the sidereal period because the object's semi-major axis typically advances slowly.
Also, the tropical period of Earth (a tropical year) is the interval between two
alignments of its rotational axis with the Sun, also viewed as two passages of the
object at a right ascension of 0 hr. One Earth year is slightly shorter than the period
for the Sun to complete one circuit along the ecliptic (a sidereal year) because
the inclined axis and equatorial plane slowly precess (rotate with respect
to reference stars), realigning with the Sun before the orbit completes. This cycle of
axial precession for Earth, known as precession of the equinoxes, recurs roughly
every 25,770 years.[citation needed]
According to Kepler's Third Law, the orbital period T (in seconds) of two point masses
orbiting each other in a circular or elliptic orbit is:[2]
where: