Physics, asked by adityabrv1512, 8 months ago

Name 3 difference between geostationary and polar satellites

Answers

Answered by ÚɢʟʏÐᴜᴄᴋʟɪɴɢ1
5

Answer:

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↪Geostationary Satellites have a circular orbit that lies in the plane of the earth's equator. ... In case of polar satellites, the orbital plane contains the Earth's axis so the satellite passes over the Earth's poles as seen in the illustration.

↪Polar satellites have orbits that go north-south so they cross both the North and South Poles. Geostationary satellites are just what it says. They look like they are standing still in the sky, but they actually are orbiting the Earth once every 24 hours, the same time it takes the Earth to make one rotation.

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Answered by Zainab200098
0

Answer:

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Explanation:

While polar orbits have an inclination of about 90 degrees to the equator, geostationary orbits match the rotation of the Earth. A sun-synchronous orbit passes by any given point with the same local solar time, which is useful for consistent lighting and sun angle.

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