yes it will
No. The satellites used to distribute Sirius/XM "satellite" radio operate on frequencies assigned to Sirius/XM "satellite" radio. They don't operate on frequencies allocated to the GPS system.
if the radio can glow in the dark or if the radio lighted by when u could see the channels
1891 patent was placed to get all rights to build and operate radio
802.11a
most likely cause is a bad ground or a short circuit, probably in the radio
No. The satellites used to distribute Sirius/XM "satellite" radio operate on frequencies assigned to Sirius/XM "satellite" radio. They don't operate on frequencies allocated to the GPS system.
if the radio can glow in the dark or if the radio lighted by when u could see the channels
leaving on the radio
Radio Millenium operates in many different countries. They operate in the United States, Belgium, Italy and more. There is also a company called Millenium Radio that operates out of the state of New Jersey.
The "radio" is named as such to reflect the type of energy used to cause the radio instrument to operate. That being "Radiant Energy."
1891 patent was placed to get all rights to build and operate radio
As far as I know, there is no "optical radio telescope". There are, separately, optical telescopes (which work with visible light), and radio telescopes (which work with radio waves).
802.11a
radio
most likely cause is a bad ground or a short circuit, probably in the radio
That is because radio waves pass through clouds so radio astronomers do not have to wait for a clear sky.
use a nather one close to that many amps