If you subscribe to the HD service. Otherwise you might only get a standard definition picture.
The correct signal for satellite TV is determined by the direction the satellite dish is pointed. DirecTV and Dish Network signals come out of the Southern sky from the direction directly above Texas. Many other satellites orbit the earth and send out audio and video signals of all different types and formats. Simply put, a satellite dish is like a catchers mitt and will catch any signal coming from the satellite it is aimed towards. The signal received will need to be properly matched with the in house receivers and equipment in order to work properly. For example, if a Dish Network dish is aimed towards a DirecTV satellite signal, the system will not work.
Put it in and try it. The worse it'll do is not work.
HD televisions are capable of displaying a wide range of image resolutions and timings. Most larger HD televisions will accept 1080p, 1080i, 720p, 576i, 480i and each of these in several different field rates. The standard broadcast format for HD is1080i with 720p used to far lesser extent. The television shows "1080i" because that is the signal being received. It will only display "1080p" if it receives a 1080p signal. Currently, broadcasters do not transmit 1080p and have no plans to do so for a number of years from now. When playing standard definition material into the television, it is likely to display 576i, 480i or perhaps show the letters PAL or NTSC to indicate the standard definition signal format.
Russia put the first satellite into space. The satellite's name is sputnik 1
The very first satellite put into orbit was the Russian satellite Sputnik put into orbit on October 4th, 1957.
a satellite graveyard is a pleas on which when the satellites is out of use they put them their
A satellite in a geostationary orbit goes around the earth at the same angular speed that the earth spins on its axis. So to someone on the earth the satellite looks like its not moving because its always at the same location above the earth. These satellites are used for communication purposes. For example, TV stations can reflect their signal off of such a satellite by aiming their transmitter at it. They don't have to change their aim because the satellite is always there. Satellite dish receivers can easily pick up the reflected signal just by aiming the dish antenna at the satellite and again you don't have to change this aim because the satellite is always there. The satellites have to be in a circular orbit above the equator in order for it to be put in a geostationary orbit.
I do
If a satellite appears to move in the sky, then the ground station antenna has to keep moving in order to follow it, and the satellite will be below the horizon, invisible, and unusable for half the time over the long run. That would really put a crimp in the operation of all the little 2-ft satellite TV dishes on top of garages.
satellite launch vehicle ( ROCKET)
i have no signal on my phone i have signal on my phone i have no signal on my television i have signal on m y television the signal has been interupted i dont know the hand signal i need to know the signal what is the signal strength teach me the hand signals what is the signal for danger i have little signal i have high signal i have no signal how much signal do i have how do i tell how much signal i have is there a sign for signal by the way you already put it in a sentence by asking a question lol
Russia (Then known as USSR ) was the first to put it's satellite (called "Sputnik") into orbit. The date was 4 October 1957. "Explorer 1" was the United States' first artificial satellite and was launched on January 31, 1958