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No. The equator is tilted about 23.5° from the plane of the Earth's orbit.
Maximum inclination of moon's orbit to the ecliptic = 5.3°Current inclination of the ecliptic to the celestial equator = 23.4°Moon's maximum declination = 5.3° + 23.4° = + 28.7°Maximum altitude of the celestial equator at 42° north latitude = 90° - 42° = 48°Moon's maximum altitude at 42° north latitude = 48° + 28.7° = 76.7°
not at all, because their orbits don't come close enough together
As unlikely as this is, no one above or below the equator would ever see the moon.
The average radial velocity of Mars is 1.85° that is inclined to the ecliptic. While its inclination to the Sunâ??s equator 5.65° and its inclination to an invariable plane is 1.67°.
Mercury's Inclination of it's equator to it's orbit is 0 degrees. The answer is Mercury
There is no set inclination of a satellites orbit to the earth's equator. Once in space, the spin of the earth or where it's poles happen to be become irrelevant to the satellite. Many satellites like spy and weather satellites orbit over the two poles (north and south) while communication satellites are placed in orbit directly above the equator at a height that is synchronised with the earth's orbit. This way they stay permanently above the same place on the equator and do not APPEAR to move at all.
In the context of satellites, the inclination angle is the angle between the equator and the polar orbit. The polar satellite has high angle of 90 Deg and the Geo SAT has angle of 0 Deg
it is a low inclination orbit
88 Days
Mercury, with an inclination of 7 degrees.
2.5 degrees.
For convenience, Earth's orbit is considered to be at 0 degrees inclination. All other planets' orbits are compared with Earth's orbital tilt.
No. The equator is tilted about 23.5° from the plane of the Earth's orbit.
mercury has the greatest orbital inclination
The Earth's tilt, or inclination, or obliquity is about 23.44 degrees from the plane of its orbit around the Sun.
All satellites pass the equator. Twice every orbit.