It is a geostationary operational environmental satellite, though I'm not sure what is does.
Among one of many differences is that Landsat is Polar-orbiting while GOES is geostationary. This also means that GOES is much further above the surface, so the resolution is poorer.
A space station
Gamma rays
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.
polar satallite
GOES was first launched on June 16,1978
Uplink frequency is a frequency that goes from the ground to the satellite. Downlink frequency goes from the satellite to the ground.
it depends on where the satellite is. if the satellite is close, it will work
GOES 8 was an American weather satellite
If any thing goes around sun then it will be named as planet instead satellite. The one which goes around planet is known to be satellite. Now in case of moon that too goes around the sun along with earth but goes in spiral path
We have assigned names of things obviously. Planet is the name for those which goes around the sun. And satellite is the one which goes around the planet. So earth is a planet and not considered as satellite. Moon is the natural satellite to our earth.
The Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) is a type of weather satellite that operates in a geostationary orbit, approximately 35,786 kilometers (22,236 miles) above the Earth's equator. This allows it to continuously monitor the same geographic area, providing real-time data on weather patterns, atmospheric conditions, and severe weather events. GOES satellites are crucial for forecasting weather, monitoring natural disasters, and supporting emergency response efforts.
Among one of many differences is that Landsat is Polar-orbiting while GOES is geostationary. This also means that GOES is much further above the surface, so the resolution is poorer.
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It is a hard decision whether you switch from cable to satellite dish providers. When there are storms, the satellite goes out very easily, but cable has it's downs too.
Usually during storms, satellite service is good, but sometimes the reception goes out and that can be a hassle.
Yes, Its the same type of cable used by satellite TV installers.