- What will future satellite technology bring?
- What do satellites allow you to see "live" on TV that you would not see otherwise?
What are some current events that you have seen on TV either asthey happened or shortly after?
Connections
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1. What do satellites allow you to see "live" on TV that you would not see otherwise? What are some current events that you have seen on TV either as they happened or shortly after? 2. Why do communications-satellite orbits need to be so far from the earth?
Vocabulary
- digital:
- describes a system or device in which information is transferred by
- electrical:
- "on-off," "high-low," or "1/0" pulses
- elliptical:
- having the form of a closed oval-shaped curve
- gravity:
- the force that tends to pull any two objects together
- orbit:
- a closed path followed by a satellite
Try This
Overview
The post-World War II era ushered in the development of satellites and their launch systems, and with it, the communications revolution. In 1958, the "space race" began when the Soviets launched Sputnik. The first American communications satellite, Telstar 1, was launched in 1962. It could handle 600 telephone conversations simultaneously. Today, over 200 international communications satellites, similar to the Intelstat VI family, can carry 33,000 telephone calls at once. This capability will again be exceeded with the development of future satellites. Isaac Newton first discovered how gravity keeps satellites in orbit when he observed how the moon orbits the earth. Any object, be it the moon or a communications satellite, is pulled toward the earth by the force of gravity. But, if it is moving fast enough and is moving perpendicular to the pull of gravity, it falls in a curved path and circles the earth. Although it's always falling, it stays in orbit. (It's similar to a ball on a string: if you swing it fast enough, it will travel in a circle around your hand.) If a satellite does not move fast enough, it eventually spirals closer and closer to the earth and burns up in the earth's atmosphere. Satellites are sent into space and placed in orbit in one of two ways. The first way is with an expendable rocket that launches the satellite out of the earth's atmosphere. A smaller rocket attached to the satellite then places the satellite into the proper orbit. The second way of getting a satellite into space is on board a space shuttle. After the shuttle reaches a low earth orbit, astronauts release the satellite. The shuttle backs away and a transfer engine on the satellite places it in its proper orbit. Satellites orbit the earth primarily in four ways: polar orbits, geosynchronous orbits, low earth orbits, and molniya orbits. In a polar orbit, a satellite orbits the earth from pole to pole. It covers different parts of the earth as the earth turns beneath it. This orbit is used for observing the weather and mapping earth resources. Most communications satellites are put into a geosynchronous orbit. This kind of orbit positions a satellite over the equator; the satellite orbits the earth at the same speed as the earth is turning, giving the satellite the appearance of being stationary. Low earth orbits vary with the type of satellites and their primary purposes. The uses of satellites in low earth orbit may range from scientific research to surveillance. Molniya orbits are highly elliptical and are used primarily by Soviet communications satellites. Satellites will continue to grow in popularity, complexity, and uses, limited only by the imaginations of those involved in the technology.Activity
Combine art and science in this communications experiment. You will learn how digital images are made, and how signals are sent and received. Materials- graph paper, 5 squares to the inch OR plain paper on which you have drawn lines vertically and horizontally, creating 5 squares to the inch
- pencils
- Pair your students; one will be the "sender," the other the "receiver."
- Distribute graph paper to each student, and have each student draw a 10" x 10" square on the paper.
- Within this 10" square, have the sender draw a simple picture. The receiver should not be able to see what the sender has drawn.
- Direct the sender to "read" her picture to the receiver, using a digital code: If a square is blank, the sender says, "Zero"; if the square is filled in, the sender says, "One." Using this code, start with the top row and read from left to right.
- The receiver, upon hearing this code, transfers the information to his 10" square on his graph paper.
- At the end of the first row, the sender says, "End row 1," and repeats this at the end of each row.
- At the end of the 10th row, look at the picture on the receiver's paper. Check the results to see how accurate the transfer was.
- Change roles and repeat steps 1 through 7. Try this activity using larger or more complex drawings.
Resources
- Baylin, F. (1986) Satellites today: The complete guide to satellite
television. Indianapolis, IN: Howard W. Sams.
Damon, T. (1989) Introduction to space: The science of space flight.
Malabar, FL: Orbit Books.
Additional sources of information:
Estes Industries
1295 H Street
Penrose, CO 81240
(educational materials, including computer software for Apple IIe systems)
NASA
Education Division
Mail Code F
Washington, DC 20546
U.S. Printing Office
Superintendent of Documents
Washington, DC 20402
(request Subject Bibliography Index #297: Space, Rockets, and Satellites)
Smithsonian Museum's Air & Space
P.O. Box 53261
Boulder, CO 80301
(periodical)








