The orbit, at an inclination of 98.14°, crosses the equator each day at around 1:30 pm solar time, giving the constellation its name (the "A" stands for "afternoon"[2]) and crosses the equator again on the night side of the Earth, at around 1:30 am.
They are spaced a few minutes apart from each other so their collective observations may be used to build high-definition three-dimensional images of Earth's atmosphere and surface.
Satellites
Active
The train, as of January 2022[update],[3][4][5] consists of three active satellites:
OCO-2, lead spacecraft in formation, replaces the failed OCO and was launched for NASA on July 2, 2014.
Aura, a multi-national satellite, lags OCO-2 by 19 minutes, launched for NASA on July 15, 2004.
Past
PARASOL, launched by CNES on December 18, 2004 and moved to another (lower) orbit on December 2, 2009. PARASOL was deactivated in 2013[6]
CloudSat, launched with CALIPSO on April 28, 2006 and moved to another (lower) orbit on February 22, 2018.[5] Now part of the C-train.
CALIPSO, launched on April 28, 2006, is a joint effort of CNES and NASA. It follows CloudSat by no more than 8.5 seconds. CALIPSO was moved to CloudSat's new orbit in September 2018.[7] It was then part of the C-train with Cloudsat until it was officially decommissioned on August 1, 2023.
Aqua, used to run 4 minutes behind GCOM-W1, launched for NASA on May 4, 2002. In January 2022, it descended from the A-Train to save fuel and now is in a free-drift mode, wherein its equatorial crossing time is slowly drifting to later times.
Failed
OCO,[8] destroyed by a launch vehicle failure on February 24, 2009,[9] and was replaced by OCO-2.
Glory,[10] failed during launch on a Taurus XL rocket on March 4, 2011, and would have flown between CALIPSO and Aura.
References
^«A-train Symposium October 2007: Constellation keeps its promises», CNESMAG, January 2008