Apogee
The orbital high point, or apogee, is the farthest point in an object's orbit around another body, such as a planet or star. It is the point in the orbit where the object is at its maximum distance from the body it is orbiting.
The farthest point in an orbit is called the apoapsis, or apogee in the case of Earth orbits. This is the point where the distance between the orbiting body and the primary body is the greatest.
That point is called apogee and it rotates round the orbital plane every 19 years.
The closest point in an orbit is called the perigee, for objects orbiting Earth, or periapsis for objects orbiting other celestial bodies.
The rotation of an object around a fixed point is called "revolution" or "orbital motion".
Perigee
Orbital speed is the velocity (speed) of an object as it travels an orbital path around a reference point.
The orbital high point, or apogee, is the farthest point in an object's orbit around another body, such as a planet or star. It is the point in the orbit where the object is at its maximum distance from the body it is orbiting.
In molecular orbital theory, a node is a point in a molecular orbital where the probability of finding an electron is zero. Nodes help determine the shape and energy of the molecular orbital, influencing the chemical properties of the molecule.
The 'Apogee'. is the furthest point on a planets orbital track about the Sun. The 'Perigee' is the corresponding nearest point.
As far as has been possible to observe so far, Mercury's tilt is listed as "probably zero".In other words, its equator is thought to lie in its orbital plane, and its axis of rotation is thought to be perpendicular to its orbital plane.
The farthest point in an orbit is called the apoapsis, or apogee in the case of Earth orbits. This is the point where the distance between the orbiting body and the primary body is the greatest.
The time it takes for something to go completely around a fixed point.
That point is called apogee and it rotates round the orbital plane every 19 years.
That point is called apogee and it rotates round the orbital plane every 19 years.
the distance between their "average" orbital paths is 78,341,212 Km
Its orbital distance ranges between 1.4 and 9.7 million kilometres.