'Launch window' is a term used in
aerospace to describe a time period in which a particular
rocket must be launched. If the rocket does not launch within the "window", it has to wait for the next one before it can be launched.
For trips into largely arbitrary
Earth orbits almost any time will do, but if the
spacecraft intends to
rendezvous with a space station or another vehicle that is already in an orbit the launch must be carefully timed to occur around the times that the target vehicle's
orbital planes intersects the launch site.
To go to another planet without using any kind of
gravitational slingshot, if eccentricity of orbits is not a factor, launch windows are periodic according to the
synodic period; for example, in the case of
Mars the period is 2.135 years, i.e. 780 days. In other cases launch windows are irregular. Sometimes rare opportunities are used. When a rare opportunity is missed, sometimes another target has to be selected.
For launches above
low Earth orbit (LEO), the actual launch time can be somewhat flexible if a
parking orbit is used, because the inclination and time the spacecraft initially spends in the parking orbit can be varied.
The term 'launch window' was popularized with the worldwide coverage of the early space program. People in business came to use the phrase 'window of opportunity' to be defined by specific range of dates, within which, they must take action or miss the chance to leverage the marketplace to their benefit.
See also
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Hohmann transfer orbit
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Interplanetary travel
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Space rendezvous