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A satellite in a polar orbit orbits from north to south. As the earth turns, it passes over all the surface area of the earth. Therefore, polar orbits are ideal for detecting things on the planet's surface.

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Q: Why are polar satellites called Detective satellite?
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What is a polar highly elliptical satellite used for?

It is used for communication plates where geostationary satellites can't reach, in polar areas. Russia uses elliptical satellites where the geostationary satellites can't reach.


What is the exact time taken by the polar satellite in one revolution of earth?

Polar satellites, orbiting over the polar region (first link), takes approximately 100 minutes to do one complete pass at 25-degrees Earth rotational difference, to map the full section.(second link)For other satellites, it can take 90 minutes just to re-position a satellite to cover a new region, and THEN begin mapping. But the polar satellites stay in a constant orbit.


Some satellites are put into an orbit around the earths poles what is this type of orbit called?

Circum polar satellites.


Is IRS a polar satellite or equatorial satellite?

It is polar orbiting.


Angle of inclination of a line?

In the context of satellites, the inclination angle is the angle between the equator and the polar orbit. The polar satellite has high angle of 90 Deg and the Geo SAT has angle of 0 Deg


What is the name of the next rocket of India?

The most recent rocket launch of India occurred in February 2013. The Polar Satellite Launch vehicle launched, carrying seven satellites, with the purpose of launching new ocean SARAL satellites.


What are the strategic locations of satellites?

There are two special locations for satellites: * geostationary orbits * polar orbits For satellite communication, it is very convenient if one can align fixed ground antenna to point at the satellite. The only way to get a satellite to stay exactly in front of a fixed ground antenna is to put it in geostationary orbit -- an altitude of 35,786 km above sea level above the equator. Other than geostationary orbit, there are a few other orbits that hold a satellite approximately in front of a fixed ground antenna for several hours -- the Molniya orbit and the Tundra orbit. Satellites designed to take photos of Earth (weather satellites, spy satellites, etc.) are typically in a polar orbit. Sooner or later, a satellite in polar orbit will end up directly overhead any given point on Earth. Typically these satellites are in an orbit very roughly 1000 km above sea level (roughly 100 minute orbit), because higher orbits are more expensive, and orbits less than a few hundred km rapidly decay from air friction.


What is a polar satellite State two uses of a polar satellite?

a polar satellite is a satellite that travels around the earth passing over both poles with every orbit. they are use for mapping and spying


Do all satellites orbit the same direction?

No, all satellites do not orbit Earth at the same altitude. An good overview of this can be found on http://www.idirect.net/Company/Satellite-Basics/How-Satellite-Works.aspx. This overview reviews Low Earth Orbit, Medium Earth Orbit and Geostationary Orbits.


When was Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle created?

Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle was created in 1993.


What are the main differences between geostationary orbit and polar orbit?

A polar orbit is an Orbit in which a Satellite passes above or nearly above both of the Geographical poles of the body (usually a planet such as the Earth, but possibly another body such as the Sun being orbited on each revolution. It therefore has an Inclination of (or very close to) 90 degrees to the Equator. Except in the special case of a polar Geosynchronous orbit, a satellite in a polar orbit will pass over the equator at a different Longitude on each of its orbits.A geostationary orbit (GEO) is a circular orbit directly above the Earth's Equator From the ground, a geostationary object appears motionless in the sky and is therefore the Orbit of most interest to operators of Communication Satellites. Their orbital periods (time taken to revolve around earth) is exactly the same as the planet's (such as Earth's) rotational period. The Geosynchronous orbit is approximately 36,000 km above Earth's surface.geostionary satellites are positioned at an exact height above the earth, at this height they orbit the earth at the same speed at which the earth rotates on its axis whereas polar satellites have a much lower orbit, orbiting the earth quite quickly, scanning different areas of the earth at fairly infrequent periods.


What has the author Marina Galand written?

Marina Galand has written: 'Radiation damage of the proton MEPED detector on POES (TIROS/NOAA) satellites' -- subject(s): Detectors, Deterioration, Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellite Program (U.S.), Scientific satellites, Solar radiation