The orbit helps the satellite go into orbit.
yes explorer 1 was the artificial satellite and after it was launched the United States became the second country to send a satellite in orbit
No. A portion of his ashes were placed on a satellite in orbit, but the orbit of this satellite decayed and it burned up in Earth's atmosphere. A new mission is planned which will send some of his ashes into deep space.
The mass of a satellite does not affect its orbit. The orbit of a satellite is determined by its speed and the gravitational pull of the object it is orbiting around, such as a planet. The mass of the satellite itself does not play a significant role in determining its orbit.
The Russians put the first satellite into orbit named sputnik.
24 hours
A Geostationary orbit - it means that the satellite will always stay above the same point on Earth. Hope that helps
The cost varies depending on the size of the satellite, which determines which launch vehicle (rocket) can be used, the orbit the satellite is to put into (polar, low Earth orbit, geosynchronous, etc.) Costs start at about $50 million which does not include the cost of developing and building the satellite.
The repetitivity and revisit of satellite orbit refers to the time elapsed between observations of the same point on earth by a satellite. It usually depends with the target location, the orbit of the satellite and the swath of the sensor.
The very first satellite put into orbit was the Russian satellite Sputnik put into orbit on October 4th, 1957.
YES As height increases, speed of satellite decreases.
By definition planets orbit a star and satellites orbit a planet. Therefore there are no satellite planets.
The plane of a satellite's orbit must include the center of the earth.