Orbital Period Calculator
Calculate orbital period using Kepler's Third Law (T = 2π√(a³/GM)). Supports AU/years shortcut, Earth orbits, solar system presets, and synodic period.
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kg
Orbital Period (s)
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Orbital Period (days) —
Orbital Period (years) —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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kg
Period (days)
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Period (years) —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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kg
Primary Orbit
Orbital Period —
Orbital Period —
Circular Orbital Speed —
Relative & Transfer
Synodic Period (vs body 2) —
Hohmann Transfer Time (to body 2) —
Reference
Geosync Altitude (Earth) —
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the semi-major axis in meters and central body mass in kg for the general formula.
- Use Around Sun tab for the AU/years shortcut.
- Use Around Earth for satellite altitudes.
- The Professional tier adds synodic period, geosynchronous altitude, and Hohmann transfer time.
Formula
T = 2π × √(a³ / (GM))
Around Sun: T² (yr) = a³ (AU)
Synodic: 1/P_syn = |1/P₁ − 1/P₂|
Example
Earth around Sun: a = 1 AU = 1.496×10¹¹ m, M_Sun = 1.989×10³⁰ kg → T = 2π√(a³/GM) = 365.25 days
Frequently Asked Questions
- Kepler's Third Law states T² ∝ a³. Around the Sun: T² (years) = a³ (AU). The full formula is T = 2π × √(a³/(GM)).
- The ISS orbits at about 408 km altitude (semi-major axis ≈ 6779 km from Earth's center), giving an orbital period of approximately 92.7 minutes.
- A geosynchronous orbit has a 24-hour period matching Earth's rotation. For a circular equatorial orbit this is geostationary at ~35,786 km altitude.
- The synodic period is the time between successive alignments of two orbiting bodies. 1/P_syn = |1/P₁ − 1/P₂|.
- For orbits around the Sun, T² = a³ where T is in years and a is in AU. Mars (a=1.524 AU): T = 1.524^1.5 ≈ 1.88 years = 687 days.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- Kepler's Laws — NASA Space Place — NASA
- JPL Horizons — Orbital Elements — NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- University Physics Vol. 1, Ch. 13.5: Kepler's Laws — OpenStax
- NIST Physical Constants — G — NIST CODATA
- Orbital Mechanics — Wikipedia — Wikipedia