P
PeterD
Guest
On Sat, 01 Nov 2008 17:54:57 -0000, "Peter Hucker" <none@spam.com>
wrote:
Belt. CLarke wrote about geostationary satellites in his books many
years before it was actually done, and the region was named after him.
wrote:
A narrow ring of space directly above the equator, AKA the ClarkeOn Sat, 01 Nov 2008 14:29:37 -0000, PeterD <peter2@hipson.net> wrote:
On Fri, 31 Oct 2008 18:09:48 -0400, Claude Hopper
boobooililililil@roadrunner.com> wrote:
nobody > wrote:
Claude Hopper wrote:
Why the lag? Light and microwaves travel at 186,000 miles a second.
That means a microwave could go around the earth 7.7 times in a second.
A satellite is only 500 miles up, that's 1000 miles round trip for a
microwave. That means a signal should be able to travel to a satellite
and back to earth 186 times a second or once in .005 seconds.
So why is there such a lag in satellite internet and TV??? Answer me
that. They keep telling me its the distance to travel. I don't think so.
So you think the satllites involved are only 500 miles up?
Google GEOSTATIONARY, dipshit
I did dipshit, some are 850km which is 500 miles, dipshit.
IDIOT...
[PHIL-MODE]
YOU FUCKING MORON, YOU'VE GOT SHIT FOR BRAINS.
YOU COULD NOT UNDERSTAND EVEN A SIMPLE THING, LET ALONE THE CONCEPT OF
GEOSTATIONARY SATELITES, YOU IDIOT!
[/PHIL-MODE]
Try this, idiot:
Geostationary orbits can be achieved only very close to the ring
What is "the ring"?
Belt. CLarke wrote about geostationary satellites in his books many
years before it was actually done, and the region was named after him.
35,786 km (22,236 mi) directly above the equator. This equates to an
orbital velocity of 3.07 km/s (1.91 mi/s) or a period of 1436 minutes.
reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geostationary
which is as good as any for this basic shit.
NOW FUCKING PISS OFF, TROLL...