Satellites How do they work? NAVSTAR Global Positioning System Satellite
Uses DirectTV, DBS News Telephones Cable GPS Emergency radio beacons
Components ANY object that revolves around a planet (e.g. the moon) Artificial Orbit, Apogee, and Perigee Custom built “Space junk”
Sputnik 1 (October 4, 1957) Soviet Union A Thermometer A Battery A Radio transmitter Pressurized Nitrogen gas
3, 2, 1, Lift-off (Launch) Rockets and the space shuttle Orbital Velocity and Altitude Launch Window
Types Weather satellites (TIROS, COSMOS) Communications satellites (Telstar, Intelsat) transponder Broadcast satellites Scientific satellites (Hubble telescope) Navigational satellites (GPS Navstar) Rescue satellites Earth observation satellites (LANDST) Military satellites (???)
Components Frame/Body (Bus) Power source Computer Communications Attitude control system (ACS)
Geostationary Orbits Positioned over the same area Normally, 22,223 Miles Weather Communication Communications Satellite
Asynchronous Orbits Multiple passes 80-1,200 miles Teledesic, LEOs Observation ( miles) 3,000-6,000 miles Scientific 6,000-12,000 miles Navigation (GPS)
Polar Orbit Low altitude Passes over the poles on each orbit Mapping and photography
Teledesic: Low Earth Orbit Satellites (LEOs) Network of Constellations “Internet-in- the-Sky TM”
LEO Coverage 288 operational satellites, divided into 12 planes with 24 satellites each
LEO Service Optical Intense coverage Inter-Satellite Links
Next Generation (Northpoint) Northpoint Technology Terrestrial satellite
Northpoint Current: Multiple towers Northpoint “cellular network”
Northpoint Impact Competition with cable and DBS Fiber optics to all Opportunities for Geostationary satellites Spectrum planning
Broadwave USA Inc. Local service Local and National Programming Cheaper