Staying at the "same point" (i.e., above the same location on Earth) is only
important for a Geosynchronous satellite, which must occupy a very high orbit.
Most satellites (and the International Space Station) are in lower orbits, which
means they orbit the Earth faster than it rotates, so they don't stay in the
same place.
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Answer #1:
Now to deal with the question . . .
If the satellite is going to be used by non-technical people with little 'dishes'
on the corner of their house or garage, it's important that they not need to
move their dish to follow the satellite across the sky. If people couldn't "set
it and forget it", there would be no Dish network or Direct TV or any of the
others, because very few customers would be willing to do what it takes to
keep their dish tracking the satellite. Sure it could be automated, with a
motorized mechanism that constantly steers the dish to follow the satellite.
But that would cost 20 times what those dinky dishes cost now, and again,
the operators would not "have a business". The only way that this whole
scheme of satellite-direct-to-the-home can work is to make the satellite
motionless in the sky. The installer comes to your house, mounts the dish,
'finds' the satellite, points the dish in that direction, and locks it permanently
in that position. That's the only way the business model can work.
All the planets stay approximately in one plane - the plane of the ecliptic. So if you have the x-coordinate normal to that plane their x-coordinates will stay small. It is more usual to have the z-coordinate normal to the plane.
Both Mercury and Venus do not have Moons.
The pilot would try to navigate around the storm if possible. If caught in a thunderstorm, the plane's structure is designed to withstand lightning strikes and turbulence. The pilot will follow protocols to ensure the safety of passengers and crew.
The plane that divides the body into equal left and right portions is called the midsagittal plane, also known as the median plane. This plane passes through the midline of the body, dividing it into two symmetrical halves.
Transverse plane.
YES
yes
u tell me
no NO PLANE CAN STAY IN AIR EXPECT HELICOPTER JUST BECAUSE OF HIS WINGS
They go around and around. More artificial satellites proceed from west to east, because it takes less energy (fuel) to launch a satellite into that kind of orbit. But there's no fundamental reason why a satellite can't go in any direction you want. The only requirements are . . . -- The center of the Earth has to be in the plane of the orbit. -- If you expect it to stay up there for a while, then the satellite has to stay outside most of the Earth's atmosphere.
The satellite from Stay Tune usually creates an astral plane.
During a layover, passengers typically stay on the plane while it is refueled and cleaned. They are not allowed to disembark the plane until it reaches its final destination.
None. The Moon itself is a satellite of the Earth.
yes it can
A GPS uses satallites to identify location
The engine on the plane is not as strong and big as the rocket Also the pressure could destroy the plane into pieces
A plane with no engine is a glider. They use the air currents to stay aloft.