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... a feeling as if his weight is zero, because he is constantly falling around the Earth in the satellite's orbit..
because of the gravity in our solar system. The sun keeps us (the earth) in its gravity. And we keep the satellite in our gravity. And it works like stone in thread and if we rotate it then stone will be at the other end of thread and will keep surrounding you.
Moons and planetary rings can revolve around a planet.A satellite or moon.A satellite or if it's big enough a moon
a satellite. a satellite is a natural or artificial body that revolves around a planet
The Moon is Earth's natural satellite.
Gravity and velocity vectors in the proper ratio combine to make a state of perpetual falling towards the Earth that always misses
... a feeling as if his weight is zero, because he is constantly falling around the Earth in the satellite's orbit..
It depends on where the Moon is in its orbit around the Earth, and where the Earthis in its orbit around the Sun. With those positions always changing, it takes sunlightanywhere between8minutes 9.3seconds and 8minutes 28.7secondsto reach the Moon.
. The speed of the satellite is adjusted so that it falls to earth at the same rate that the curve of the earth falls away from the satellite. The satellite is perpetually falling, but it never hits the ground!
No, the Equator is about 40,075 kilometres (24,901 mi) long.
No. Satellites ARE falling. But they are also moving "sideways", and so quickly that by the time the satellite has fallen to the Earth, the satellite has continued AROUND the Earth, and missed!
No a satallite is just something that orbits around an object.
A Geostationary orbit - it means that the satellite will always stay above the same point on Earth. Hope that helps
a weather satellite and it rotates around the Earth at the same rate and in the same direction that Earth revolves so it is always fixed over the same location.
They do fall. But they're traveling fast enough so that the surface of the Earth falls away from them as fast as they are falling. Same thing that keeps the Earth from falling into the sun.
Yes. They accelerate (change the direction of their movement) towards Earth, and this may be labelled as "falling".Yes. They accelerate (change the direction of their movement) towards Earth, and this may be labelled as "falling".Yes. They accelerate (change the direction of their movement) towards Earth, and this may be labelled as "falling".Yes. They accelerate (change the direction of their movement) towards Earth, and this may be labelled as "falling".
WikiAnswers cannot support diagrams - sorry. A satellite around the Earth will have an elliptical or (in some cases) a circular orbit. The satellite is constantly accelerating towards the Earth due to the gravity between the Earth and the satellite. However, because of the satellite's tangential velocity, it stays at a relatively constant distance from the Earth.