Satellite Characteristics: Orbits and Swaths
Remote sensing instruments can be placed on a
variety of platforms to view and image targets. Although ground-based and
aircraft platforms may be used, satellites provide a great deal of the remote
sensing imagery commonly used today. Satellites have several unique
characteristics which make them particularly useful for remote sensing of the
Earth's surface.
The path followed by a satellite is referred to as its orbit.
Satellite orbits are matched to the capability and objective of the sensor(s)
they carry. Orbit selection can vary in terms of altitude (their height above
the Earth's surface) and their orientation and rotation relative to the Earth.
Satellites at very high altitudes, which view the same portion of the Earth's
surface at all times have geostationary orbits.
These geostationary satellites, at altitudes of approximately 36,000
kilometres, revolve at speeds which match the rotation of the Earth so they
seem stationary, relative to the Earth's surface. This allows the satellites to
observe and collect information continuously over specific areas. Weather and
communications satellites commonly have these types of orbits. Due to their
high altitude, some geostationary weather satellites can monitor weather and
cloud patterns covering an entire hemisphere of the Earth.
Many remote sensing platforms are designed to follow an orbit
(basically north-south) which, in conjunction with the Earth's rotation
(west-east), allows them to cover most of the Earth's surface over a certain
period of time. These are near-polar orbits,
so named for the inclination of the orbit relative to a line running between
the North and South poles. Many of these satellite orbits are also sunsynchronous such
that they cover each area of the world at a constant local time of day called local
sun time. At any given latitude, the position of the sun in the
sky as the satellite passes overhead will be the same within the same season.
This ensures consistent illumination conditions when acquiring images in a
specific season over successive years, or over a particular area over a series
of days. This is an important factor for monitoring changes between images or
for mosaicking adjacent images together, as they do not have to be corrected
for different illumination conditions.
Most of the remote sensing satellite platforms today are in near-polar
orbits, which means that the satellite travels northwards on one side of the
Earth and then toward the southern pole on the second half of its orbit. These
are called ascending and descending passes, respectively. If the
orbit is also sun-synchronous, the ascending pass is most likely on the
shadowed side of the Earth while the descending pass is on the sunlit side.
Sensors recording reflected solar energy only image the surface on a descending
pass, when solar illumination is available. Active sensors which provide their
own illumination or passive sensors that record emitted (e.g. thermal)
radiation can also image the surface on ascending passes.
As a satellite revolves around the Earth, the sensor "sees" a
certain portion of the Earth's surface. The area imaged on the surface, is
referred to as the swath. Imaging swaths for spaceborne sensors
generally vary between tens and hundreds of kilometres wide. As the satellite
orbits the Earth from pole to pole, its east-west position wouldn't change if
the Earth didn't rotate. However, as seen from the Earth, it seems that the
satellite is shifting westward because the Earth is rotating (from west to
east) beneath it. This apparent movement allows the satellite swath to cover
a new area with each consecutive pass. The satellite's orbit and
the rotation of the Earth work together to allow complete coverage of the
Earth's surface, after it has completed one complete cycle of orbits.
If we start with any randomly selected pass in a satellite's orbit, an
orbit cycle will be completed when the satellite retraces its path, passing
over the same point on the Earth's surface directly below the satellite (called
the nadir point) for a second time. The exact length of time
of the orbital cycle will vary with each satellite. The interval of time
required for the satellite to complete its orbit cycle is not the same as the
"revisit period". Using steerable sensors, an satellite-borne
instrument can view an area (off-nadir) before and after the orbit passes over
a target, thus making the 'revisit' time less than the orbit cycle time. The
revisit period is an important consideration for a number of monitoring
applications, especially when frequent imaging is required (for example, to
monitor the spread of an oil spill, or the extent of flooding). In near-polar
orbits, areas at high latitudes will be imaged more frequently than the
equatorial zone due to the increasing overlap in adjacent swaths as
the orbit paths come closer together near the poles.
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