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Why do artificial satellites of the Earth rotate by inertia longer than artificial satellites of the Moon?
Maybe it's just me
Quote from: OPWhy do artificial satellites of the Earth rotate by inertia longer than artificial satellites of the Moon?I agree that satellites orbit because they have inertia and a velocity relative to the parent body, which gives them angular momentum.From a different viewpoint...The Earth is surrounded by an atmosphere which extends beyond 100km (getting less dense the farther you go)- This means that satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) continually lose angular momentum, and their orbit decays- The International Space Station at around 400km altitude would eventually burn up in the atmosphere if it did not get regular rocket boosts- In contrast, the Moon has no atmosphere - any transient events like meteor impacts just result in a slightly less dense vacuum in the vicinity of the impact.- So I expect that an artificial satellite at 150km altitude above the Moon would remain in orbit much longer than an artificial satellite at 150km above the Earth.
But for some reason everything happens the other way around.
Quote from: Yusup Hizirov on 21/03/2024 20:16:10But for some reason everything happens the other way around.Do you have evidence of this?
planetary satellites do not have satellites
Why do asteroids have satellites,
Why don't Janus and Epimetheus form a double satellite?