Why Launch Sites at the Equator Are Efficient for the Launch Vehicles?

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If you have a look at the distribution of the launch sites in a world map, you’d find that most of the launch sites are mostly constructed closer to the equator and in the eastern coast in most of the countries. Apart from various factors that decided the location of those sites, there is also a simple reason why they are built closer to the equator.

It’s all about speed

At the equator, the speed at which any point on the equatorial line moves, is faster than that of the speed of a point near the poles. Which simply means that the rotational speed of someone at the equator is faster than the rotational speed of a person standing at the poles, as the former would need to cover a larger distance than the latter who only needs to cover a smaller distance in one solar day (24 hours). The exact rotational speed of the person at the equator, where he have to travel 40,075Km (circumference of the earth at the equator) in 24 hours (solar day) is 463 m/s.

This 463 m/s speed adds up to any launch vehicle that is launched towards the east from the equator. Inertia ;) This speed boost cuts down the requirement of the amount fuel for attaining the 463m/s speed. This also helps the agencies to add more payloads with the same amount of fuel in the launch vehicle.

There are even mobile launch platforms that travel near the equator to launch several payloads. Sea launch is such a private spacecraft launch service that uses mobile launch platforms to launch spacecraft from any location near the equator.

One of the advantages of launching a satellite from the equator is that the satellite can be inclined to any required orbit from there with less propellant consumption. For geo-stationary satellites, the requirement of a plane change is eliminated and this means that more payloads can be added to the launch vehicle for the same cost.

On the contrary, to launch a satellite or a spacecraft into a polar orbit, the equatorial speed boost is undesirable and the launch vehicles are usually launched towards the west (opposite to the earth’s spin about its axis).

This post was first published on October 23, 2014.

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Karthikeyan KC

Aeronautical engineer, dev, science fiction author, gamer, and an explorer. I am the creator of Geekswipe. I love writing about physics, aerospace, astronomy, and python. I created Swyde. Currently working on Arclind Mindspace.

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1 Response

  1. I played enough KSP to understand this.

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