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CHAPTER 5 SECTIONS > Orbit | Swathing Pattern | WRS | Long Term Acquisition Plan
5.1
Orbit
Figure 5.1 - Landsat Orbit
The orbit of Landsat 7 is repetitive, circular,
Sun-synchronous, and near polar at a nominal altitude of 705 km (438
miles) at the Equator. The spacecraft crosses the Equator from north
to south on a descending orbital node from between 10:00 AM and 10:15
AM on each pass. Circling the Earth at 7.5 km/sec, each orbit takes
nearly 99 minutes. The spacecraft completes just over 14 orbits per
day, covering the entire Earth between 81 degrees north and south
latitude every 16 days. Figure 5.1 illustrates Landsat's orbit characteristics.
Landsat 7 and Terra were launched and injected into identical
705 kilometer, sun-synchronous orbits in 1999. This same day orbit
configuration will space the satellites ideally 15 minutes apart
(i.e. equatorial crossing times of 10:00 to 10:15 AM for Landsat
7 and 10:30 for Terra). A multispectral data set having both high
(30 meter) and medium to coarse (250 to 1000 meter) spatial resolution
will thus be acquired on a global basis repetitively and under nearly
identical atmospheric and plant physiological conditions.
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