Satellites
are regularly launched into the earths orbit. Rockets are used
to launch satellites for cell phone, television, and internet communiction
services.
Very short wave radio signals (microwaves) can easily pass
through the atmosphere out into space, they are therefore used to communicate between the Earth and the satellites.
They are transmitted from a ground station to an orbiting
satellite. This is usually in a geostationary orbit so that its geographical
position above the Earth's surface does not alter. The satellite receives
these and then, acting like a space mirror, redirects them at a receiving
station on Earth. Being high in the sky, obstacles like mountain ranges
do not get in the way of transmission of the signal by satellite.
Orbits
Satellites must not travel too slowly in space, or they
will fall back to earth (decaying orbit!). If they travel too fast (at
least 25,039 mph) they will escape earths orbit altogether and
go out into the solar system and beyond.
The velocity and altitude that allows the satellite
to remain in a geostationary orbit has to be calculated - the
satellite stays fixed in the same spot over the earth by orbiting once
a day. A satellite in geostationary orbit appears to remain in the same
spot in the sky all the time. Really, it is simply travelling at exactly
the same speed as the Earth is rotating below it, but it looks like
it is staying still regardless of the direction in which it travels,
east or west. A satellite in geostationary orbit is very high up, therefore,
they are also known as high orbits. This kind of orbit allows communications
companies to know exactly where their satellites are in order to build
a more efficient network.
It is not possible to orbit a satellite which is stationary
over a point which is not on the equator. This limitation is not serious,
however, since most of the earth's surface is visible from geostationary
orbit. In fact, a single geostationary satellite can see 42 percent
of the earth's surface and a constellation of geostationary satellites
can see all of the earth's surface between 81° S and 81° N.The advantage of a satellite in a geostationary orbit
is that it remains stationary relative to the earth's surface. This
makes it an ideal orbit for communications since it will not be necessary
to track the satellite to determine where to point an antenna. However,
there are some disadvantages:
the long distance between the satellite and the
ground. With sufficient power or a large enough antenna, though, this
limitation can be overcome.
the fact that there is only one geostationary orbit
presents a more serious limitation. There are only so many slots into
which geostationary satellites can be placed.
A geosynchronous orbit - is not geostationary
- it orbits at a slight incline around the Earth. A geosynchronous one
has the period of one day (like the geostationary ones) but the shape
of the orbit can be elliptical - geostationary ones have to be circular
and stationed over the equator.Polar orbits
These are useful for spy satellites and weather satellites.
On every pass around the Earth,they pass over both the north and south
poles. Therefore, as the Earth rotates to the east underneath the satellite
which is travelling north and south, it can cover the entire Earth's
surface. A polar orbiting satellite typically covers the entire globe
every 14 days.
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