NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Richard B. Langley
Date: 2013 Aug 25, 23:44 +0000
| Richard B. Langley E-mail: lang@unb.ca |
| Geodetic Research Laboratory Web: http://www.unb.ca/GGE/ |
| Dept. of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering Phone: +1 506 453-5142 |
| University of New Brunswick Fax: +1 506 453-4943 |
| Fredericton, N.B., Canada E3B 5A3 |
| Fredericton? Where's that? See: http://www.fredericton.ca/ |
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Sent: Sunday, August 25, 2013 8:20 PM
To: Richard Langley
Subject: [NavList] Re: Visual satellite position fix
Richard Langley wrote:
"Nothing to do with the Earth's precession. The figure-of-eight occurs if the orbit inclination is not exactly zero degrees. It becomes more pronounced the higher the inclination."
Yes. In fact, the ground track of a geostationary satellite in a slightly elliptical orbit inclined 23.45° to the Earth's equator should look awfully familiar. It's identical to the Sun's analemma. And the "figure eight" shape has the same geometric origin. If the orbital eccentricity of a geostationary satellite is zero, the north and south lobes of the analemma are symmetrical. If the orbit has non-zero eccentricity, then one lobe will be larger than the other, much like the Sun's analemma.
-FER
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