Satellites should orbit the earth above the atmosphere. If satellites fall down into the atmosphere, every time they hit an air molecule, it will make them hotter. If they hit enough air molecules, it will make them real hot and slow them down. Then like a flaming meteor, they burn up as they streak across the sky.
Satellites orbit above the atmosphere, generally more than 1,000 km above the surface, although different orbits exist at different altitudes depending on the purpose. You wouldn't want a satellite in the atmosphere because it needs to be a certain distance to orbit. Also, parts of the atmosphere would not be a friendly operating environment, and the friction closer to the earth would slow them down too much.
thermosphere
Not exosphere because exosphere is not as common to communicate with the satillite orbit.
Most satellites orbit within the atmospheric layer, thermosphere. This layer, which is right above mesosphere, starts around 53 miles above the planet Earth.
Exosphere, dude.
ionosphere
Satellites in a low orbit, however, are slowed by friction with Earth's atmosphere.
The atmosphere is divided in to five layers. These are Troposhere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere and Exosphere. The space shuttles orbit in thermosphere.The atmosphere is divided in to five layers. These are Troposhere, Stratospere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere and Exosphere. The space shuttles orbit in thermosphere.
A satellite is an object in space that is orbiting another object. The moon is a natural satellite of the earth. Man-made satellites orbit the earth just outside the earth atmosphere and used for many purposes such as GPS, telecommunications, weather, and spying to name a few. Satellites are in space
satellites that spy typically in a low earth orbit with a big telescope looking down at the ground, like google satellite on steroids
An isochronous satellite is one that orbits the earth in one day. So it orbits the earth as the same speed as the earth rotates. Most satellites that are isochronous are infact geostationary satellites as they also stay in the same position above the earth. However these satellites occupy a very specific orbit above the equator. It is possible to have isochronous satellites that aren't geostationary however getting them to remain in orbit would prove difficult.
thermosphere
Most communications satellites operate outside of the earth's atmosphere. The GPS satellites are about 23,000 miles from the surface of the earth.
If they are in the atmosphere (low earth orbit), satellites are in the ionosphere. If they are in higher orbits, satellites are considered to be outside the atmosphere.
Thermosphere and the exosphere
exosphere
exosphere
Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.Communication satellites orbit around the Earth.
SatellitesSatellites orbit in outer space, not in the earth. They are sent to outer space where the gravitational pull of the earth pulls them around, just as the earth is pulled around the sun in a similar manner. The layer is the exosphere. It greatly depends on what the satellite is for and who owns it how far up it orbits. Imaging satellites need to be close to the Earth, so they orbit about 130 miles up. Communications satellites are generally at 23,000 miles up. GPS satellites are up about 13,000 miles.
Manned satellites orbit in the thermosphere, from about 53 to 500 miles above the Earth.
Yes, the satellites orbit in a geosynchronous orbit, as with most all communications satellites. (Some exceptions are satellites such as the global positioning satellites.)
Geosynchronous orbit? or Low Earth Orbit?
The ionosphere