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Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite, in Orbit
Engineer Aligns Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
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Syncom, the First Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
The 1963 launch of Syncom, the world's first geosynchronous communications satellite, began a communications revolution. Objects placed in orbit over the equator can be synchronized with Earth's daily rotation, apperaing to stand still to a ground observer, thus the term geostationary. Nongeosynchronous communications satellites before Syncom required huge swiveling ground antennas and expensive tracking computers to stay in contact with them during the brief time they raced overhead. In contrast, a geosynchronous satellite communicates directly and continuously with any ground station in its line of sight, using fixed antennas. No complex tracking antennas are necessary. Synchronous altitude also means that a satellite is in sunlight 99 percent of the time, eliminating the need for an active temperature control system.
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Unique identifier
BI216942
Boeing ID
94-12443
Type
Image
Size
2870px × 1928px 15MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1960s
advertisements and graphics
brown
full body views
high-tech / advanced
historic production status
historic significance
illustrations
innovation
nobody
progress
satellites
space
symmetry
text
vintage / retro
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