written 7.7 years ago by | • modified 7.7 years ago |
Mumbai University > Computer Engineering > Sem 6 > Mobile Communication & Computing
Marks: 4 Marks
Year: Dec 2016
written 7.7 years ago by | • modified 7.7 years ago |
Mumbai University > Computer Engineering > Sem 6 > Mobile Communication & Computing
Marks: 4 Marks
Year: Dec 2016
written 7.7 years ago by | • modified 7.7 years ago |
A satellite doesn't necessarily have to be a tin can spinning through space. The word "satellite" is more general than that: it means a smaller, space-based object moving in a loop (an orbit) around a larger object.
The Moon is a natural satellite of Earth, for example, because gravity locks it in orbit around our planet. The tin cans we think of as satellites are actually artificial (human-built) satellites that move in precisely calculated paths, circular or elliptical (oval), at various distances from Earth, usually well outside its atmosphere.
Following are the problems of satellite signals travelling from a satellite to a receiver: