In gravitationally bound systems, the orbital speed of an astronomical body or object (e.g. planet, moon, satellite, spacecraft, or star) is the speed at which it around either the barycenter (the combined center of mass) or, if one body is much more massive than the other bodies of the system combined, its speed relative to the center of mass of the primary body.
The term can be used to refer to either the mean orbital speed (i.e. the average speed over an entire orbit) or its instantaneous speed at a particular point in its orbit. The maximum (instantaneous) orbital speed occurs at apsis (perigee, perihelion, etc.), while the minimum speed for objects in closed orbits occurs at apoapsis (apogee, aphelion, etc.). In ideal two-body problem, objects in open orbits continue to slow down forever as their distance to the barycenter increases.
When a system approximates a two-body system, instantaneous orbital speed at a given point of the orbit can be computed from its distance to the central body and the object's specific orbital energy, sometimes called "total energy". Specific orbital energy is constant and independent of position.
Specific orbital energy, or total energy, is equal to Ek − Ep (the difference between kinetic energy and potential energy). The sign of the result may be positive, zero, or negative and the sign tells us something about the type of orbit:
This law implies that the body moves slower near its apoapsis than near its periapsis, because at the smaller distance along the arc it needs to move faster to cover the same area.
where is the orbital velocity, is the length of the semimajor axis, is the orbital period, and is the standard gravitational parameter. This is an approximation that only holds true when the orbiting body is of considerably lesser mass than the central one, and eccentricity is close to zero.
When one of the bodies is not of considerably lesser mass see: Gravitational two-body problem
So, when one of the masses is almost negligible compared to the other mass, as the case for Earth and Sun, one can approximate the orbit velocity as:
or:
Where is the (greater) mass around which this negligible mass or body is orbiting, and is the escape velocity at a distance from the center of the primary body equal to the radius of the orbit.
For an object in an eccentric orbit orbiting a much larger body, the length of the orbit decreases with orbital eccentricity , and is an ellipse. This can be used to obtain a more accurate estimate of the average orbital speed:
The mean orbital speed decreases with eccentricity.
where is the standard gravitational parameter of the orbited body, is the distance at which the speed is to be calculated, and is the length of the semi-major axis of the elliptical orbit. This expression is called the vis-viva equation.
For the Earth at perihelion, the value is:
which is slightly faster than Earth's average orbital speed of , as expected from Kepler's 2nd Law.
Halley's Comet on an eccentric orbit that reaches beyond Neptune will be moving 54.6 km/s when from the Sun, 41.5 km/s when 1 AU from the Sun (passing Earth's orbit), and roughly 1 km/s at aphelion from the Sun., where r is the distance from the Sun, and a is the major semi-axis. Objects passing Earth's orbit going faster than 42.1 km/s have achieved escape velocity and will be ejected from the Solar System if not slowed down by a gravitational interaction with a planet.
| +Velocities of better-known numbered objects that have perihelion close to the Sun
! Object
! Velocity at perihelion
! Velocity at 1 AU (passing Earth's orbit) |
| 37.7 km/s |
| 38.5 km/s |
| 32.7 km/s |
| 30.9 km/s |
| 19.8 km/s |
| 41.5 km/s |
|
|