Orbital Speed Calculator

🌍 Orbital Speed Calculator

Calculate Orbital Velocities for Planets, Moons, and Satellites

Understanding Orbital Mechanics

Every object in orbit—from the Moon around Earth to Earth around the Sun—travels at a precise speed determined by gravitational forces. Our Orbital Speed Calculator computes these velocities using Kepler’s laws and Newton’s gravitational equations. Earth orbits the Sun at 30 km/s (67,000 mph)—fast enough to circle the planet in 3 minutes! The International Space Station races around Earth at 7.66 km/s, completing an orbit every 90 minutes. Understanding orbital speeds is crucial for mission planning, satellite deployment, and comprehending why planets closer to the Sun move faster than distant ones.

This calculator from SpaceTimeMesh uses the formula v = √(GM/r) where G is gravitational constant, M is central body mass, and r is orbital radius. It reveals fascinating patterns: Mercury speeds around the Sun at 47 km/s while distant Neptune crawls at 5.4 km/s. This isn’t arbitrary—it’s the inevitable result of balancing gravitational pull against centrifugal force. Objects in low Earth orbit travel faster than those in geostationary orbit. The tool helps space agencies calculate delta-v requirements for orbital transfers and understand why achieving orbit requires such tremendous energy.

Perfect for aerospace students studying orbital mechanics, mission planners calculating spacecraft trajectories, educators demonstrating Kepler’s laws, or space enthusiasts understanding why satellites at different altitudes have different speeds. Discover why geostationary satellites must orbit at exactly 35,786 km altitude, why the Moon is slowly drifting away from Earth, and how orbital velocity determines whether an object stays in orbit, escapes, or crashes.

Calculate Orbital Velocities

Orbital Speed Calculator

Discover how fast you're moving through space right now

🌍 Real-time calculations based on your location
💫
Your Current Speed Through Space
Calculating...
Combined motion of all cosmic movements

Your Location

Enter your location for accurate rotation speed

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°
🌍 Location: Equator (0°N, 0°E)
Quick Locations:

Speed Breakdown

Individual components of your cosmic journey

Distance Calculator

How far you've traveled while reading this page

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Time on Page
0 seconds
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Distance Traveled
0 km
🌍 From Earth Rotation: 0 km
☀️ Around the Sun: 0 km
🌌 Through the Galaxy: 0 km

Put Your Speed in Perspective

How your cosmic speed compares to everyday speeds

Visualizing Your Cosmic Motion

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Earth Rotation
1,674 km/h
☀️
Orbit Around Sun
107,000 km/h
🌌
Through Galaxy
792,000 km/h
💫
Through Universe
2.3 million km/h

Understanding Cosmic Motion

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Earth's Rotation

Earth spins once every 24 hours. At the equator, you're moving at 1,674 km/h (465 m/s). At the poles, you're barely moving at all!

☀️

Orbiting the Sun

Earth travels around the Sun at 107,000 km/h (29.78 km/s). We complete one orbit every 365.25 days - that's one year!

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Galactic Motion

Our entire solar system orbits the Milky Way's center at 792,000 km/h (220 km/s). One galactic year takes 230 million Earth years!

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Local Group

The Milky Way is moving toward Andromeda galaxy at 100 km/s. They'll collide in about 4.5 billion years!

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Through the Universe

Our Local Group is racing toward the "Great Attractor" at 627 km/s - about 2.3 million km/h through space!

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Why Don't We Feel It?

All motion is relative! We don't feel these speeds because everything around us is moving together. No acceleration = no sensation.

Mind-Blowing Speed Facts

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In one second, you travel 370 km through space - that's Paris to London!
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While reading this sentence, Earth rotated enough to move you about 10 meters
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In one minute, you've traveled 1,800 km through the solar system around the Sun
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You're moving 10x faster than the Apollo spacecraft that went to the Moon
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In one hour, our solar system moves 792,000 km through the galaxy
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Since you started reading, you've traveled thousands of kilometers through space!

🚀 Extreme Speed Comparisons

🐌 Slowest: Snail
0.001 km/h
You're moving ? times faster
✈️ Jet Airliner
900 km/h
You're moving ? times faster
🔊 Speed of Sound
1,235 km/h
You're moving ? times faster
💡 Light Speed
1.08 billion km/h
You're moving ? % of light speed

Where Could You Go?

At your current speed, how long to reach...

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Eiffel Tower
343 km from London
? seconds
🌙
The Moon
384,400 km
? hours
☀️
The Sun
149.6 million km
? days
♂️
Mars (closest)
54.6 million km
? days

How to Use the Orbital Speed Calculator

Step 1: Select Orbital System

Choose the central body (Sun, Earth, Jupiter, etc.) and the orbiting object. Options include all planets around the Sun, moons around their planets, or artificial satellites at various altitudes around Earth. Each combination has unique orbital characteristics.

Step 2: Input Orbital Parameters

Enter the orbital radius or altitude. For planets, use semi-major axis length. For satellites, specify altitude above surface. The calculator handles circular orbits directly and provides average velocity for elliptical orbits based on orbital energy.

Step 3: Analyze Results

View orbital speed in km/s, mph, and m/s. See orbital period (how long one complete orbit takes), compare to escape velocity, and understand the relationship between altitude and speed. Discover why lower orbits require higher speeds to maintain stability.

Orbital Speeds Across the Solar System

☿ Inner Planets (Fast)

Mercury: 47 km/s, Venus: 35 km/s, Earth: 30 km/s, Mars: 24 km/s. Inner planets race around the Sun due to strong gravitational pull. Mercury completes an orbit in just 88 Earth days! Explore orbital periods for all planets.

♃ Outer Planets (Slow)

Jupiter: 13 km/s, Saturn: 9.7 km/s, Uranus: 6.8 km/s, Neptune: 5.4 km/s. Distant planets move leisurely due to weak solar gravity. Neptune takes 165 Earth years per orbit—it hasn’t completed one full orbit since its 1846 discovery! See our age calculator.

🛰️ Earth Satellites

ISS (400 km): 7.66 km/s, GPS (20,200 km): 3.87 km/s, Geostationary (35,786 km): 3.07 km/s. Lower satellites move faster—counterintuitive but essential! The ISS must constantly boost its orbit due to atmospheric drag. Track the ISS position real-time.

🌙 Planetary Moons

Moon around Earth: 1.02 km/s, Io around Jupiter: 17.3 km/s, Titan around Saturn: 5.57 km/s. Moons closer to massive planets orbit faster. Io completes an orbit in 1.77 days! Calculate lunar orbital mechanics in detail.

The Physics of Orbital Velocity

Circular Orbit Formula

v = √(GM/r) where v is orbital velocity, G is gravitational constant (6.674×10⁻¹¹ N⋅m²/kg²), M is central body mass, r is orbital radius. This formula shows velocity decreases as √r—double the distance means √2 (≈0.707) times the speed. It’s derived from balancing gravitational force with centripetal acceleration.

Kepler’s Third Law

T² ∝ r³ where T is orbital period, r is semi-major axis. This means orbital period increases faster than distance—Saturn is 10× farther from the Sun than Earth but takes 30× longer to orbit. Combined with velocity formula, this creates the pattern where distant objects orbit more slowly both in speed and period.

Elliptical Orbits

Most orbits are elliptical, not circular. Objects move faster at perihelion (closest approach) and slower at aphelion (farthest point). Earth varies from 30.29 km/s (January) to 29.29 km/s (July). The vis-viva equation v² = GM(2/r – 1/a) describes velocity at any point in an elliptical orbit, where a is semi-major axis.

Frequently Asked Questions About Orbital Speeds

Why do closer objects orbit faster?

Because gravity is stronger closer to the central body. To maintain orbit, objects must achieve a balance between gravitational pull inward and centrifugal force outward. Closer objects experience stronger gravity requiring higher tangential velocity to avoid falling inward. This is why Mercury races at 47 km/s while Neptune crawls at 5.4 km/s. It’s counterintuitive because we expect closer = slower, but orbital mechanics inverts this expectation.

What happens if a satellite slows down?

It drops to a lower orbit where it must actually speed up! This seems paradoxical. When a satellite fires retro-rockets to slow down, it loses altitude. At the lower altitude, gravitational force is stronger, requiring a higher orbital velocity to maintain stable orbit. Conversely, speeding up raises the orbit where velocity decreases. This is why orbital rendezvous is complex—speeding up to “catch” a satellite ahead actually moves you to a higher, slower orbit, making you fall behind!

How do geostationary satellites stay over one spot?

They orbit at exactly 35,786 km altitude where orbital period matches Earth’s 24-hour rotation. At this altitude, orbital velocity is 3.07 km/s—precisely the speed needed to complete one orbit as Earth completes one rotation. The satellite stays above the same point on the equator. This only works at one specific altitude; move higher or lower and the orbital period changes, breaking synchronization. That’s why geostationary satellites cluster at this single orbital ring.

Can you orbit at any altitude?

Theoretically yes, but practical limits exist. Too low and atmospheric drag causes orbital decay—the ISS at 400 km requires periodic boosts. Too high and other factors dominate—radiation exposure increases, communication delays grow, and eventually you reach the Hill sphere boundary where other bodies’ gravity interferes. Most Earth satellites orbit between 200 km (minimum sustainable) and 35,786 km (geostationary), though some specialized missions go higher. Each altitude has tradeoffs between coverage, latency, and decay rate.

Explore More Orbital Mechanics Tools

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