On the use of satellites in Molniya orbit for meteorological and oceanographic observations of the high latitudes

Two types of orbits are currently used for meteorological satellites: geostationary orbit and low earth orbit. Neither orbit serves the high latitudes well. The Soviet Molniya satellites fly in a highly elliptic orbit inclined 63.4 deg to the equator. For approximately 8 h of its 12-h orbit, a satel...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kidder, Stanley Q.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1992
Subjects:
13
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19920072956
Description
Summary:Two types of orbits are currently used for meteorological satellites: geostationary orbit and low earth orbit. Neither orbit serves the high latitudes well. The Soviet Molniya satellites fly in a highly elliptic orbit inclined 63.4 deg to the equator. For approximately 8 h of its 12-h orbit, a satellite in Molniya orbit is synchronized with the earth such that it is nearly geostationary in the high latitudes. A meteorological/oceanographic satellite in Molniya orbit would bring nearly the same frequent imaging capability to the high latitudes which the tropics and mid-latitudes now enjoy. The uses of such a satellite include Arctic forecasting, study of polar lows, high latitude precipitation estimation, Antarctic studies, sea ice monitoring, and ozone measurements.