What is Satellites: Definition and 176 Discussions

In the context of spaceflight, a satellite is an object that has been intentionally placed into orbit. These objects are called artificial satellites to distinguish them from natural satellites such as Earth's Moon.
On 4 October 1957, the Soviet Union launched the world's first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1. Since then, about 8,900 satellites from more than 40 countries have been launched. According to a 2018 estimate, about 5,000 remained in orbit. Of those, about 1,900 were operational, while the rest had exceeded their useful lives and become space debris. Approximately 63% of operational satellites are in low Earth orbit, 6% are in medium-Earth orbit (at 20,000 km), 29% are in geostationary orbit (at 36,000 km) and the remaining 2% are in various elliptical orbits. In terms of countries with the most satellites, the United States has the most with 1,897 satellites, China is second with 412, and Russia third with 176.
A few large space stations, including the International Space Station, have been launched in parts and assembled in orbit. Over a dozen space probes have been placed into orbit around other bodies and become artificial satellites of the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, a few asteroids, a comet and the Sun.
Satellites are used for many purposes. Among several other applications, they can be used to make star maps and maps of planetary surfaces, and also take pictures of planets they are launched into. Common types include military and civilian Earth observation satellites, communications satellites, navigation satellites, weather satellites, and space telescopes. Space stations and human spacecraft in orbit are also satellites.
Satellites can operate by themselves or as part of a larger system, a satellite formation or satellite constellation.
Satellite orbits vary greatly, depending on the purpose of the satellite, and are classified in a number of ways. Well-known (overlapping) classes include low Earth orbit, polar orbit, and geostationary orbit.
A launch vehicle is a rocket that places a satellite into orbit. Usually, it lifts off from a launch pad on land. Some are launched at sea from a submarine or a mobile maritime platform, or aboard a plane (see air launch to orbit).
Satellites are usually semi-independent computer-controlled systems. Satellite subsystems attend many tasks, such as power generation, thermal control, telemetry, attitude control, scientific instrumentation, communication, etc.

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  1. P

    24 GPS satellites carry atomic clocks

    Quoted from http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/gps.html#c1" How do they know which of the points is the correct one? (see sentence in blod) Thank you!:approve:
  2. R

    Can Weather Delay Climate Satellites Studying Weather?

    They were delayed by weather. (get it?) :smile: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060428/ts_nm/space_satellites_dc" Off topic, here's an informative piece of journalism from the same article: Idiots.
  3. S

    Weird Question About Satellites

    If you had a pair of celestial rotating in a circle, both of equal mass size. Would it be possible for the planets to have a shared satellite? Thank you for reading, Alex
  4. X

    Solving Power & Satellite Problems: Get Help Here

    Hello I need osme help with these two problems. I was told the ansers but do not undersatnd how the answers were gotten. 1. The power dissipated in lifting a 2.0 kg ball vertically at 3.0m/s equals what? The answer is 59 W. ALl I know is that power equals Work/ delta T but there is no...
  5. P

    Satellite Orbital Transfers: How to Calculate Work Done by Rocket Motors

    hi everyone. I am having a little bit of trouble on this and was wondering if someone can help. i don't understand how to answer parts c and f this is the picture: a)Consider a 1000 kg communication satellite that needs to be boosted from an orbit 300 km above the Earth to a geosynchronous...
  6. P

    Satellites in Orbit: Explore the Outer Space

    i solved it. thanks to all who responded
  7. W

    How do satellites stay in orbit? Free fall or centripetal?

    Hi, I just recently posted this on the astrophysics forum but thought it would probably not quite fit so i decided to move it here. Hi, this is my first post. I have been trying to find an answer out of my own interest but is unable to do so. while searching I found this wonderful website. I...
  8. W

    How do satellites stay in orbit?

    Hi, this is my first post. I have been trying to find an answer out of my own interest but is unable to do so. while searching I found this wonderful website. I hope you guys can help. I came across a series of questions today and one of the question asks "What keeps satellites in orbit?"...
  9. V

    Are Solar Power Satellites the Future of Renewable Energy?

    I’ve been wondering for a while now whether there were any projects on the drawing board for Solar Power Satellites, (SPS) and today I came across a Japanese experiment set to launch on January 18, called the Furoshiki experiment. Furoshiki is a Japanese word for a cloth used to wrap up small...
  10. N

    Hubble discovers two new satellites of Pluto

    NASA'S HUBBLE REVEALS POSSIBLE NEW MOONS AROUND PLUTO Using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to view the ninth planet in our solar system, astronomers discovered Pluto may have not one, but three moons. If confirmed, the discovery of the two new moons could offer insights into the nature and...
  11. F

    Satellites and Space station questions

    I really don't understand the universal gravitation chapters and the satellites one. It is sooo confusing. So can anyone help me with these questions. 1. Determine the magnitude of the apparent of a 56 kg student standing in an elevator when the elevator is experiencing an acceleration of (a)...
  12. V

    Satellites: Radiation Pressure

    How do scientists counteract the radiation pressure of sunlight falling on artifical satellites for e.g. on solar panels? Do they use rockets or is the orbit self-correcting?
  13. S

    How do scientists put satellites into space

    How do scientists ensure that a satellite passes the same point on Earth's surface over and over again in each successive revolution? Isn't there any variation in the latitude over which the satellite passes?
  14. F

    Need help with satellites and Kepler's Laws

    Here's my problem: A 23.0-kg satellite has a circular orbit with a period of 2.35 h and a radius of 8.90×106 m around a planet of unknown mass. If the magnitude of the gravitational acceleration on the surface of the planet is 8.90 m/s2, what is the radius of the planet? I got to say, I...
  15. N

    Saturn Satellites: Collapse & Reconstruction

    I hear that saturn satellites collapsed because of an incident or s.th like this and then because of their gravity they reconstructed again. what do you think or know about it?!
  16. S

    Calculating Solar System Reach of Pioneer Craft Without Assist

    another problem bout satellites... to exit the solar system, the Pioneer spacecraft used a gravitational assist from jupiter, which increased its kinetic energy at the expense of Jupiter's kinetic energy. If the spacecraft did not have assist, how far out in the solar system would it...
  17. S

    Calculating Work to Place Satellite in Synchronous Orbit

    here is another problem... a 650kg satellite is to be placed into synchronus orbit around Earth. What amount of work must be done onthe satellite to raise it into synchronous orbit? i did.. W=GMm(1/r of Earth - 1/r of synchronous satellite) = 6.673x10^-11N m^2/kg^2...
  18. S

    How Accurate Are Calculations for Satellite Orbit Energy and Rocket Altitudes?

    this is the problem... What is the change in gravitational potential energy of a 6200kg satellite that lifts off from Earth's surface into a circular orbit of altitude2500km? i did this... r = rE +h =6.38 x10^6m + 2.5 x10^6m r=8.88 x10^6m Eg= -GMm r...
  19. D

    Help Me Solve a Homework Problem Regarding Planet X's Satellites

    i was hoping somebody could give me a hand with a homework problem i have . first here's the question . -> Planet X has two satellites . A and B . Both orbits are circular . Satellite A's orbital radius is 4 times B's orbital radius . calculate the following ratios . a) A's orbital...
  20. B

    Universal Gravitation - Satellites

    The Explorer VIII satellite, placed into orbit November 3, 1960, to investigate the ionosphere, had the following orbit parameters: perigee, 459 km; apogee, 2289 km (both distances above the Earth's surface); period, 112.7 min. Find the ratio vp/va of the speed at perigee to that at apogee.
  21. B

    Universal Gravitation - Satellites

    The Explorer VIII satellite, placed into orbit November 3, 1960, to investigate the ionosphere, had the following orbit parameters: perigee, 459 km; apogee, 2289 km (both distances above the Earth's surface); period, 112.7 min. Find the ratio vp/va of the speed at perigee to that at apogee.
  22. S

    Physics Problem: Satellites in Circular Orbits

    A satellite orbits a planet at a distance of 3.70*10^8 m. Assume that this distance is between the centers of the planet and the satellite and that the mass of the planet is 3.93*10^24 kg. Find the period for the moon's motion around the earth. Express the answers in Earth days. I tried...
  23. Q

    GRE 75, orbits, satellites and their periods

    Here is a question that I am having a hard time understanding. 75) the period of a hypothetical Earth satellite orbiting at sea level would be 80 minutes. In terms of the Earth's radius Re, the radius of a synchronous satellite orbit ( period 24 hours) is mostly: (A) 3 Re (B) 7 Re (C) 18...
  24. Clausius2

    Golden coloured paper in Satellites

    Maybe I'm not able to question about it in english. Hmmm... let's go. Why are the satellites and their external structures like panels, covered with a golden coloured paper when they are assembled?. Don't laugh at me!. I really never knew the reason. Also, I have seen the research staff of...
  25. K

    Could Geostationary Satellites End Up Gathering Over the Indian Ocean?

    How accurate does the orbiting velocity of a geostationary satellite have to be so that it keeps in synch with the same geographical part of the Earth over a period of ten years.
  26. N

    Could Programming Autonomous Satellites Be Possible?

    <first post> Would it be possible to program an autonomous satilite? (collecting its own Fuel and power from the sun?) It is possible to collect hydrogen from solar winds It is possible to charge hydrogen ions like a battery (static charge, using a van-dagraph generator) Salilites have solar...
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