1. Weather forecasts
2. Television (other than local news, and some of that is satellite-delivered as well)
3. Intercontinental telephones
4. The internet
5. Anything that uses GPS, including airlines, UPS or FedEx drivers, campers
6. The military; almost all military communications are sat-based.
Do all planets and satellites lie on the same gravitational layer?
You probably mean to ask about natural satellites as opposed to artificial satellites. In terms of neutrality, all satellites are neutral. In any event, the planet Jupiter has the most natural satellites, of any planet in our solar system. The planet Earth has the most artificial satellites.
100 and there is life on uranus... go check
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.
A space probe that found several of Neptune's moons and Neptune itself. 1989 was the year they all of the satellites. Satellites: another name for moon. NOT A DISH!!
No, not all satellites are moons. Satellites are objects that orbit a planet or other celestial body, while moons specifically refer to natural satellites that orbit planets. Artificial satellites, such as those used for communication or scientific purposes, are not considered moons.
All the satellites, communications, exploratory, military etc. are artificial satellites of Earth.
name of all artifical satellites in the solor system
All the planets have satellites, except Mercury and Venus.Jupiter
They do not. All satellites, natural or artificial, are not sentient and rule nothing.
No, Earth only has one natural satellite. All the rest have been made by humans.
Do all planets and satellites lie on the same gravitational layer?
If each ring can hold 3 satellites, you can accommodate all 24 satellites with 8 rings. Each ring would hold 3 satellites, for a total of 24 satellites.
No - satellites do not go to the moon. Satellites orbit planets/moons/objects with gravity in space.
no
The gravitational pull on all the planets are artificial satellites because the satellites orbit all the planets!
Satellites of the Earth are held in their orbits by the Earth's gravity. That includes the Moon and all the artificial satellites etc. that are up there.