The Hohmann Transfer Calculator computes orbital transfer parameters between two circular coplanar orbits using the most fuel-efficient two-impulse maneuver. Named after Walter Hohmann who described it in 1925, this elliptical transfer trajectory is fundamental to satellite constellation deployment, interplanetary mission design, and orbital rendezvous operations. Mission planners use these calculations to determine propellant budgets, transfer times, and optimal launch windows for everything from GEO satellite deployment to Mars mission architectures.
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Contents
Orbital Transfer Diagram
Hohmann Transfer Calculator
Transfer Equations
Circular Orbital Velocity
v = √(μ/r)
where μ = GM (gravitational parameter), r = orbital radius
Transfer Orbit Semi-major Axis
a = (r₁ + r₂) / 2
where r₁ = initial orbit radius, r₂ = final orbit radius
Transfer Orbit Velocity at Periapsis
vp = ���[μ(2/r₁ - 1/a)]
velocity at closest approach (initial orbit intersection)
Transfer Orbit Velocity at Apoapsis
va = √[μ(2/r₂ - 1/a)]
velocity at farthest point (final orbit intersection)
Delta-V Requirements
Δv₁ = |vp - v₁|
Δv₂ = |v₂ - va|
Δvtotal = Δv₁ + Δv₂
v₁ and v₂ are circular orbit velocities at r₁ and r₂
Transfer Time (Half Orbital Period)
T = π√(a³/μ)
time to complete the transfer from r₁ to r₂
Transfer Orbit Eccentricity
e = |r₂ - r₁| / (r₂ + r₁)
measure of ellipse elongation (0 = circular, approaching 1 = highly elliptical)
Propellant Mass (Tsiolkovsky)
mprop = m0[1 - e(-Δv/ve)]
where ve = Ispg₀, m₀ = initial spacecraft mass
Theory & Practical Applications
The Hohmann transfer represents the minimum-energy orbital maneuver between two coplanar circular orbits, discovered by German engineer Walter Hohmann in 1925 and published in his landmark work "Die Erreichbarkeit der Himmelskörper" (The Attainability of Celestial Bodies). This two-impulse transfer uses an elliptical trajectory where the periapsis touches the lower orbit and the apoapsis touches the higher orbit. While conceptually elegant, the Hohmann transfer's optimality is constrained by specific assumptions: coplanar circular orbits, impulsive burns (instantaneous velocity changes), and operation within a two-body gravitational system. Real mission scenarios often require modifications to account for plane changes, orbital inclination differences, perturbations from other bodies, and finite-duration burns.
Energy Considerations and the Vis-Viva Equation
The foundation of Hohmann transfer analysis rests on orbital energy conservation. For any orbit, the specific orbital energy (energy per unit mass) is ε = -μ/(2a), where μ is the gravitational parameter and a is the semi-major axis. A circular orbit at radius r has energy ε = -μ/(2r), while the transfer ellipse with semi-major axis a = (r₁ + r₂)/2 has energy εtransfer = -μ/(r₁ + r₂). The velocity at any point in an orbit follows the vis-viva equation: v² = μ(2/r - 1/a). This fundamental relation explains why the velocity changes required for Hohmann transfers scale with the square root of orbital radii ratios rather than linearly—a critical insight for mission planning that shows doubling the orbital radius doesn't double the Δv requirement.
The elliptical transfer orbit's eccentricity e = (r₂ - r₁)/(r₂ + r₁) governs the trajectory shape. For Earth orbit transfers from LEO (400 km altitude, r₁ ≈ 6778 km) to GEO (35786 km altitude, r₂ ≈ 42164 km), the eccentricity reaches approximately 0.726, producing a highly elongated ellipse. This high eccentricity creates substantial velocity differences between periapsis and apoapsis—the spacecraft travels at 10.24 km/s at periapsis but only 1.61 km/s at apoapsis, a 6.4:1 ratio. These extreme velocity variations complicate trajectory control during extended burns and require precise timing for the circularization burn at apoapsis.
Delta-V Budget and the Tyranny of the Rocket Equation
The total Δv requirement determines propellant mass through the Tsiolkovsky rocket equation: Δv = veln(m₀/mf), where ve is exhaust velocity (Isp × g₀) and the mass ratio m₀/mf relates initial to final mass. This exponential relationship creates severe mass penalties for high Δv missions. A LEO-to-GEO transfer requiring approximately 3.92 km/s total Δv with Isp = 300s (ve = 2.94 km/s) yields a mass ratio of 3.77:1—meaning a 1000 kg payload requires 3770 kg initial mass, with 2770 kg consumed as propellant. This explains why geostationary satellites typically launch with 50-60% of their initial mass as propellant when accounting for the Δv needed to reach GEO plus multi-year stationkeeping reserves.
Mission designers must carefully balance transfer time against Δv efficiency. While Hohmann transfers minimize propellant consumption, they impose transfer durations that may be unacceptable for time-sensitive missions. The LEO-to-GEO Hohmann transfer requires approximately 5.28 hours, during which the spacecraft passes through the Van Allen radiation belts twice. Satellites with radiation-sensitive electronics may opt for faster bi-elliptic transfers or continuous-thrust spiral trajectories using electric propulsion, trading higher effective Δv for reduced radiation exposure time. For interplanetary missions, transfer times extend dramatically—a Hohmann transfer from Earth to Mars takes approximately 259 days, while Earth to Jupiter requires 2.73 years.
Worked Example: LEO to Lunar Transfer Orbit
Consider a spacecraft in Low Earth Orbit at 350 km altitude (r₁ = 6728 km from Earth's center) that needs to reach a highly elliptical lunar transfer orbit with apogee at the Moon's orbital radius (r₂ = 384,400 km from Earth's center). Calculate the complete Hohmann transfer parameters including both burns, transfer time, and propellant requirements for a 4200 kg spacecraft equipped with bipropellant thrusters (Isp = 315s).
Given Parameters:
- Earth's gravitational parameter: μ = 3.986 × 10¹⁴ m³/s²
- Initial orbit radius: r₁ = 6,728,000 m
- Final orbit radius: r₂ = 384,400,000 m
- Spacecraft initial mass: m₀ = 4200 kg
- Specific impulse: Isp = 315 s
- Standard gravity: g₀ = 9.80665 m/s²
Step 1: Calculate Initial and Final Circular Orbit Velocities
Initial orbit velocity: v₁ = √(μ/r₁) = √(3.986×10¹⁴ / 6.728×10⁶) = 7696.3 m/s = 7.696 km/s
Final orbit velocity: v₂ = √(μ/r₂) = √(3.986×10¹⁴ / 3.844×10⁸) = 1018.3 m/s = 1.018 km/s
Step 2: Calculate Transfer Orbit Semi-major Axis and Eccentricity
Semi-major axis: a = (r₁ + r₂)/2 = (6.728×10⁶ + 3.844×10⁸)/2 = 1.9556×10⁸ m = 195,560 km
Eccentricity: e = (r₂ - r₁)/(r₂ + r₁) = (3.844×10⁸ - 6.728×10⁶)/(3.844×10⁸ + 6.728×10⁶) = 0.9656
The extremely high eccentricity (0.9656) indicates this is a highly elongated ellipse—nearly a parabolic escape trajectory. This is expected for a lunar transfer where the apogee is 57 times farther than the perigee.
Step 3: Calculate Transfer Orbit Velocities at Periapsis and Apoapsis
Periapsis velocity: vp = √[μ(2/r₁ - 1/a)] = √[3.986×10¹⁴(2/6.728×10⁶ - 1/1.9556×10⁸)] = 10,917.7 m/s = 10.918 km/s
Apoapsis velocity: va = √[μ(2/r₂ - 1/a)] = √[3.986×10¹⁴(2/3.844×10⁸ - 1/1.9556×10⁸)] = 191.1 m/s = 0.191 km/s
Step 4: Calculate Delta-V Requirements for Both Burns
First burn (perigee insertion): Δv₁ = vp - v₁ = 10,917.7 - 7696.3 = 3221.4 m/s = 3.221 km/s
Second burn (apogee circularization): Δv₂ = v₂ - va = 1018.3 - 191.1 = 827.2 m/s = 0.827 km/s
Total delta-V: Δvtotal = 3221.4 + 827.2 = 4048.6 m/s = 4.049 km/s
Step 5: Calculate Transfer Time
Transfer period (half orbit): T = π√(a³/μ) = π√[(1.9556×10⁸)³/(3.986×10¹⁴)] = 428,957 seconds = 119.2 hours = 4.97 days
Step 6: Calculate Propellant Requirements Using Tsiolkovsky Equation
Exhaust velocity: ve = Isp × g₀ = 315 × 9.80665 = 3089.1 m/s
Mass ratio for total Δv: R = e^(Δvtotal/ve) = e^(4048.6/3089.1) = e^1.311 = 3.710
Final mass: mf = m₀/R = 4200/3.710 = 1132.1 kg
Propellant mass: mprop = m₀ - mf = 4200 - 1132.1 = 3067.9 kg
Propellant fraction: mprop/m₀ = 3067.9/4200 = 73.0%
Critical Insight: This calculation reveals why lunar missions typically require staging or are launched on large expendable rockets. A single-stage spacecraft needs to dedicate 73% of its initial mass to propellant just to reach lunar orbit—before accounting for landing, surface operations, or return trajectory. This explains the Apollo program's use of the Saturn V's enormous lift capacity and the Lunar Module's separate ascent and descent stages. Modern commercial lunar missions using electric propulsion can reduce this propellant fraction dramatically by accepting much longer transfer times (months instead of days), though at the cost of increased mission complexity and radiation exposure.
Non-Hohmann Transfer Options and Multi-Body Effects
While Hohmann transfers minimize Δv for coplanar circular orbits, several situations demand alternative strategies. Bi-elliptic transfers become more efficient than Hohmann transfers when the radius ratio r₂/r₁ exceeds approximately 11.94:1. These three-impulse maneuvers first boost to an intermediate apoapsis far beyond the target orbit, then perform a small plane change or intermediate adjustment, before finally dropping to the target orbit. Though they require 30-40% longer transfer times, bi-elliptic transfers can save 5-15% Δv for high-ratio transfers like LEO to lunar orbit or GEO to disposal orbits above GEO.
Plane change requirements dramatically increase Δv budgets. A pure plane change of angle θ requires Δv = 2v·sin(θ/2), scaling nearly linearly with inclination change for small angles but becoming prohibitively expensive for large corrections. Launching from Cape Canaveral (28.5° latitude) to reach a 98° Sun-synchronous orbit requires approximately 1.8 km/s additional Δv compared to launching into the station's natural inclination. Mission designers therefore prefer combined maneuvers that perform plane changes at apoapsis where orbital velocity is lowest, reducing the Δv penalty. A 20° plane change costs 3.5 km/s at LEO velocity (7.8 km/s) but only 0.35 km/s at GEO apogee velocity (1.6 km/s)—a 10:1 advantage that explains why geostationary satellites launched into inclined transfer orbits perform their inclination correction at apogee rather than at perigee.
For more information on orbital mechanics calculations, visit the FIRGELLI Engineering Calculator Hub.
Modern Applications in Satellite Deployment and Space Mission Design
Contemporary satellite operations employ Hohmann-derived transfers across multiple orbital regimes. SpaceX's Starlink constellation deployment exemplifies mass-optimized transfers where satellites are released into a 280 km parking orbit, then use onboard ion thrusters to spiral outward to their operational 550 km altitude over 30-60 days. This continuous low-thrust trajectory approximates a series of infinitesimal Hohmann transfers, trading the time inefficiency of slow spiraling for the propellant efficiency of electric propulsion—achieving effective specific impulses above 2000s compared to chemical propulsion's 300-450s range. The Δv for this altitude change is only 130 m/s using electric propulsion versus 180 m/s for an impulsive Hohmann transfer, but the real advantage emerges when considering the 10:1 improvement in propellant mass fraction.
Interplanetary missions leverage Hohmann transfers as baseline trajectories but typically modify them for practical constraints. Mars missions target arrival Δv minimization by adjusting departure dates within the 26-month synodic period to find optimal Earth-Mars geometries. The Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity rover) launched during a Type I transfer window requiring 210 days transit time, consuming approximately 3.3 km/s for trans-Mars injection from Earth parking orbit. Mission planners deliberately chose a trajectory with 15% higher Δv than the pure Hohmann minimum to achieve aerocapture-compatible approach geometry and avoid thermal protection system mass penalties associated with steeper entry angles.
Geostationary satellite operators face unique Hohmann transfer challenges due to the 35,786 km altitude GEO belt's strategic and economic importance. A typical GEO insertion sequence involves launch into a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) with perigee at 200-400 km and apogee at GEO altitude, then spacecraft firing its apogee kick motor to circularize. The total Δv from circular LEO to GEO is approximately 3.92 km/s, but launching directly into an elliptical GTO with properly phased apogee reduces the required on-orbit Δv to 1.5-1.8 km/s by leveraging the launch vehicle's performance. This Δv reduction translates directly to satellite lifetime—a 5000 kg satellite can carry an additional 800-1000 kg of stationkeeping propellant when the launch vehicle handles most of the transfer energy, extending operational life from 12-15 years to 18-20 years or enabling higher payload mass.
Frequently Asked Questions
▼ Why is the Hohmann transfer considered the most fuel-efficient orbital maneuver?
▼ How do plane changes affect Hohmann transfer Δv requirements?
▼ What are the limitations of using impulsive burn assumptions in real spacecraft operations?
▼ How does the specific impulse of the propulsion system affect Hohmann transfer feasibility?
▼ Why do interplanetary missions rarely use pure Hohmann transfers despite their theoretical optimality?
▼ How do gravitational perturbations affect long-duration Hohmann transfers?
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About the Author
Robbie Dickson — Chief Engineer & Founder, FIRGELLI Automations
Robbie Dickson brings over two decades of engineering expertise to FIRGELLI Automations. With a distinguished career at Rolls-Royce, BMW, and Ford, he has deep expertise in mechanical systems, actuator technology, and precision engineering.