the same way rockets, space shuttles and space stations join up. travel in the same direction, same orbit, similar speed and slowly approach each other
geo stationary and polar orbiting
90000
No, it does not.
Mars has two satellite moons, Deimos & Phobos
there is no satellites orbiting Saturn
The United States has the most satellites orbiting Earth.
Old satellites orbiting near the Earth eventually fall back into the atmosphere and burn. Satellites orbiting farther away stay in orbit indefinitely.
There are over 1000 operational satellites orbiting the Earth, and probably 10,000 pieces of "space junk" also orbiting the Earth.
Currently there are only two planets with satellites orbiting them, Mars (a few of them) and Saturn (Cassini). All the planets excluding Uranus and Neptune have had satellites orbiting them at some point. We do also have two satellites orbiting minor objects and they are orbiting Comet 67-P (Rosetta) and the dwarf planet Ceres (Dawn).
Venus is one of the few planets that doesn't have any satellites orbiting around it. Venus also is a planet with no moons.
yes
the termosphere