In orbital mechanics, mean motion (represented by ) is the angular speed required for a body to complete one orbit, assuming constant speed in a circular orbit which completes in the same time as the variable speed, elliptical orbit of the actual body. The concept applies equally well to a small body revolving about a large, massive primary body or to two relatively same-sized bodies revolving about a common center of mass. While nominally a mean, and theoretically so in the case of two-body motion, in practice the mean motion is not typically an average over time. It is rather the instantaneous value which satisfies the above conditions as calculated from the current gravitational and geometric circumstances of the body's constantly-changing, perturbed orbit.
Mean motion is used as an approximation of the actual orbital speed in making an initial calculation of the body's position in its orbit, for instance, from a set of orbital elements. This mean position is refined by Kepler's equation to produce the true position.
Somewhere between my faith and fear
Out there beyond the truth
Withinthe reach of my doubting heart
I came face to face with You
I've never known a deeper place
Inside my soul, I've gotta say
I love the way You move me
My spirit's alive
I can't deny, You move me
I used to need the evidence
Right before my eyes
But Your love became the push, the pull
It took to realize
That You are the drive
The forward motion
In my life making me say
I love the way You move me
My spirit's alive
I can't deny, You move me
Yeah, You move me, yeah
You move me
My spirit's alive, I can't deny
I really love the way You move me
Oh, God, I love the way, yeah
You move, You move me, yeah
You move, You move me
You move