Once every day.
No. The moon revolves around Earth, and Earth revolves around the sun.
It appears that geosynchronous orbit (orbit that appears stationary from earth's surface) is more or less equal to the circumference of the earth (around 27,000 miles). The moon which orbits the earth reaches the same point every 29 or so days. So it would appear that the moon is around 29 times the distance for geosynchronous orbit or about 783,000 miles.
No, the earth revolves around the sun.
A Satellite movement behaves in two ways. Its orbit may be defined either as "geosynchronous" or "geostationary". Geosynchronous satellites move together with the Earth's own orbit, so it revolves in the same way as the earth is. Geostationary satellites remain statically in place for a certain coordinate...
Completing an elliptical orbit. The earth, for examples, revolves in its orbit around the sun once per year. The moon revolves in its orbit around the earth almost once per moonth.
In a geosynchronous orbit, a satellite orbits Earth at the same rate as Earth rotates and thus stays over the same place on Earth all the time.
an orbit?
Every gravitational orbit is the result of the mutual gravitational forces between the orbiting bodies.
That is called a geosynchronous orbit.
Geosynchronous orbit.
The Earth revolves around the sun in an elliptical (egg-shaped) orbit.
adverb phrase