Orbital shell (spaceflight)


In spaceflight, an orbital shell is a set of artificial satellites in circular orbits at a certain fixed altitude.

Use in satellite constellations

In the design of satellite constellations, an orbital shell usually refers to a collection of circular orbits with the same altitude and, oftentimes, orbital inclination,
distributed evenly in celestial longitude.
For a sufficiently high inclination and altitude the orbital shell covers the entire orbited body. In other cases the coverage extends up to a certain maximum latitude.
Several existing satellite constellations typically use a single orbital shell. New large megaconstellations have been proposed that consist of multiple orbital shells.

List of orbital shells

Orbital altitude InclinationPlanesSatellitesName
55053°~10
72
~360
1584
Starlink
78186.4°666Iridium
19,13064°8'324GLONASS
20,18055°624GPS
21,15055°324BeiDou
23,22256°324Galileo