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The moon is the earths only natural satellite

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16y ago

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If the earth has revolved exactly once around the sun since last time how much time pass?

It takes the Earth a year to do this that is 365.25 days.


How current are satellite maps?

Satellite maps are as current as when they taken and depends on the satellite provider and/or source for the imagery. The base imagery, for example, in Google Earth and Google Maps is on average 3-5 years old. Weather imagery and overlays in Google Earth on the other hand are updated an hourly basis. Satellite imagery is Google Earth/Maps is incrementally updated usually about every 2-3 weeks in whatever area an update is available -- the entire globe isn't updated all at once. Likewise, Bing Maps updates its imagery once a month with typically more than 10TB of imagery, but its aerial and Bird's-Eye images for a particular location can sometimes be several years out-of-date.


What Keeps a Satellite In Space?

Once a satellite is launched into orbit, the force of gravity tends to pull it toward the Earth. But by moving fast enough, it falls in a curved path and circles the Earth. So orbit is something like a controlled fall. If a satellite does not move fast enough, it will eventually spiral closer to the Earth and burn up in the Earth's atmosphere. The same balance of gravity and speed keeps the moon and the International Space Station in orbit. This answer was found at the site of: http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/aboutus/wonder_of_flight/iss.html


Why is geostationary important?

A geostationary satellite is an earth-orbiting satellite, placed at an altitude of approximately 35,800 kilometers (22,300 miles) directly over the equator, that revolves in the same direction the earth rotates (west to east). At this altitude, one orbit takes 24 hours, the same length of time as the earth requires to rotate once on its axis. The term geostationary comes from the fact that such a satellite appears nearly stationary in the sky as seen by a ground-based observer. In other words a satellite that orbits a specific part of the earth while the earth is rotating so it looks like the satellite doesn't move. For example if you put a satellite over over the geographic US it will stay over the US and turn with the earth around the axis without ever loosing site of the US.


What is the inclination of a satellite to the earths equator?

There is no set inclination of a satellites orbit to the earth's equator. Once in space, the spin of the earth or where it's poles happen to be become irrelevant to the satellite. Many satellites like spy and weather satellites orbit over the two poles (north and south) while communication satellites are placed in orbit directly above the equator at a height that is synchronised with the earth's orbit. This way they stay permanently above the same place on the equator and do not APPEAR to move at all.

Related Questions

How does the moon become earth's satellite?

By orbiting the earth about once a month.


In how many days moon satellite revolves around its own axis?

The earth's moon rotates on its axis in exactly the same period of time required for it to revolve around the earth once in its orbit ... 27.32 days.


About how much time has gone by after the moon circles earth once?

one year.


Why is it useful that a communications satellite takes one day to orbit the earth?

If an artificial satellite can be positioned so that its orbit is exactly circular, and exactly over the equator, and takes exactly one sidereal day to orbit the earth, then an observer on the earth sees the satellite hang perfectly motionless in the sky. This is a big help when you want to receive radio or TV from the satellite, and you're using a high-gain 'dish' antenna that has to stay pointed at the satellite. If the satellite moved in the sky, then you would need some complicated machinery to keep it always pointed in the right direction. But if the satellite appears motionless in the sky, then your dish never has to move ... just set it once and forget it. If the popular TV satellites moved in the sky, there's no way that all those little dishes on the houses could be equipped to track the satellite and still be economically feasible.


How many times does each gps satellite rotate around the earth in a day?

If the satellite is in low orbit, it should take about one and a half hour to go once around the Earth.If the satellite is in low orbit, it should take about one and a half hour to go once around the Earth.If the satellite is in low orbit, it should take about one and a half hour to go once around the Earth.If the satellite is in low orbit, it should take about one and a half hour to go once around the Earth.


What happens when any object is dropped from a satellite?

When an object is dropped from a satellite in orbit around Earth, it will continue orbiting Earth at the same speed and direction as the satellite. From the perspective of someone on the satellite, the object will appear to float next to them due to being in free fall. However, once the object encounters Earth's atmosphere, it will experience drag and eventually fall towards Earth.


How areTv satellites used for transmission while these satellites are constantly moving?

This is an excellent, very important question. The satellite is constantly moving in its orbit around the earth. You would think you'd have to keep moving the antenna on your house to follow it. The solution is to realize that the earth is also constantly moving ... it's rotating once every 23hours 56minutes. Then the trick is to control the orbit precisely enough so that the satellite orbit is exactly over the equator, and the satellite revolves at exactly the same rate as the earth rotates. If they can do that ... and they can ... then as far as anybody on earth can tell, the satellite looks like it's not moving at all, because it's always over the same exact point on the earth, and now you can point your little TV dish at it one time, and never have to move the antenna.


How slow or fast does earth rotate?

The planet Earth rotates on its axis exactly once per day.


How orbital speed of a satellite depends on its radius?

The larger the orbit, the longer the period of revolution. The Space Shuttle, when it is in orbit, revolves once around the earth in about 90 minutes. The moon ... and any other satellite at a distance of about a quarter million miles from earth ... takes about 27 days to revolve once around the earth.


Does the moon rotate twice on its axis as it revolves around the earth?

No, only once. Exactly.


What mean geochyncronous?

That term is used to describe a satellite in an orbit that it completes in exactly thesame time as the Earth takes to rotate once. Such a satellite appears to return tothe same longitude at the same time every day.If the orbit is circular, then the satellite always stays over the same longitude, althoughit may oscillate north and south during a day.If the orbit is circular and over the equator, then the satellite appears to hangmotionless at the same point in the sky, and it's described as "geostationary".


Is a meteor considered an artificial sateillite?

No. There are two reasons: -- A meteor is a natural body, not an artificial one. -- It was never a satellite of Earth, and once it enters the atmosphere, it's never again a satellite of the sun.