「geostationary」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| be moved to a graveyard orbit to keep the | geostationary altitude free for subsequent missions. |
| The | Geostationary Banana Over Texas project was a plan to la |
| Syncom 3 was the first | geostationary communication satellite, launched on Augus |
| s first three-axis stabilised experimental | Geostationary communication satellite. |
| also known as EchoStar 10, is an American | geostationary communications satellite which is operated |
| EchoStar XIV is an American | geostationary communications satellite which is operated |
| EchoStar XV is an American | geostationary communications satellite which is operated |
| Optus D3 is an Australian | geostationary communications satellite, which is operate |
| Thaicom 5 is a Thai | geostationary communications satellite which is operated |
| reviously known as JCSAT-12, is a Japanese | geostationary communications satellite, which is operate |
| also known as Palapa D1, is an Indonesian | geostationary communications satellite which is operated |
| Only at twice the | geostationary distance could a lead sphere possibly supp |
| The | Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget (GERB) is an instru |
| CLEO was followed by the IRIS router on a | geostationary Intelsat satellite. |
| he first customer to purchase a commercial | geostationary launch from SpaceX. |
| AMC-18 is a | geostationary Lockheed Martin A2100A communications sate |
| board the seven Meteosat first-generation | geostationary meteorological satellites. |
| ng role in the planning and acquisition of | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite for th |
| l Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite system |
| frared Observations Satellites (TIROS) and | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES |
| l Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite system |
| ic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) |
| The | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite progra |
| It was the first | Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite to be |
| Data collection systems operated via | geostationary or near-polar orbiting meteorological/envi |
| nch and on-orbit testing, it was placed in | geostationary orbit at 123° East, from where it provides |
| ollowing launch, GOES 11 was positioned in | geostationary orbit at a longitude of 104° West for test |
| nch and on-orbit testing, it was placed in | geostationary orbit at 30° West, from where it provides |
| Following launch, it raised itself to a | geostationary orbit by means of its onboard SVM-5 apogee |
| a to launch its INSAT-type satellites into | geostationary orbit and to make India less dependent on |
| ical locations, mineral deposits, and even | geostationary orbit locations and portions of the electr |
| stems/Loral intended to be launched into a | geostationary orbit and operated by Intelsat. |
| It is positioned in | Geostationary orbit at a longitude of 110° West, from wh |
| LEROS-1C apogee motor, with insertion into | geostationary orbit occurring at 20:50 GMT on 22 Februar |
| few hours after launch, and was raised to | geostationary orbit by means of an Inertial Upper Stage. |
| six hours after launch, and was raised to | geostationary orbit by means of an Inertial Upper Stage. |
| tion from the rocket, it manoeuvred into a | geostationary orbit with a perigee of 35,781 kilometres |
| Following its launch it raised itself into | geostationary orbit by means of its onboard R-4D apogee |
| transfer orbit, from which raise itself to | geostationary orbit using a LEROS-1C apogee motor. |
| nch and on-orbit testing, it was placed in | geostationary orbit at 162° East, from where it provides |
| nch and on-orbit testing, it was placed in | geostationary orbit at 123° West, from where it provided |
| It is intended to be positioned in | geostationary orbit at a longitude of 113º East, where i |
| It is positioned in | geostationary orbit at a longitude of 119° West, from wh |
| sfer orbit, from which it raised itself to | geostationary orbit by means of an onboard Star 27 apoge |
| o raise both its apogee and its perigee to | geostationary orbit as well as to decrease the orbital i |
| A | geostationary orbit occurs when an object (satellite) is |
| nch and on-orbit testing, it was placed in | geostationary orbit at 73° East, from where it provides |
| The | geostationary orbit is subject to orbit perturbations ca |
| nch and on-orbit testing, it was placed in | geostationary orbit at 10° East, from where it provided |
| ds and most of Mexico, and is located in a | geostationary orbit over the Pacific Ocean east of Hawai |
| It will raise itself into | geostationary orbit by means of its onboard R-4D apogee |
| The ASO is analogous to a | geostationary orbit (GSO) about Earth. |
| SES-7 operates | geostationary orbit and intended to be located at a long |
| It will subsequently raise itself into | geostationary orbit by means of its onboard propulsion s |
| Upon reaching | geostationary orbit on 16 March, it was redesignated GOE |
| It is positioned in | geostationary orbit at a longitude of 70 degrees East. |
| A | geostationary orbit (or Geostationary Earth Orbit - GEO) |
| e operational at 74° West longitude in the | geostationary orbit and replaced SBS-6 which was moved o |
| Following launch, it was positioned in | geostationary orbit at a longitude of 90° West for on-or |
| An object in a | geostationary orbit appears motionless, at a fixed posit |
| tion from the rocket, it manoeuvred into a | geostationary orbit with a perigee of 35,785 kilometres |
| sfer orbit, from which it raised itself to | geostationary orbit by means of an onboard R-4D apogee m |
| sfer orbit, from which it raised itself to | geostationary orbit using an IHI -500-N apogee motor. |
| le of moving up to 100 tonnes of mass to a | geostationary orbit, but was never flown. |
| d monitor meteorological conditions from a | geostationary orbit, intended to replace GOES-5 and prov |
| Similar to the | geostationary orbit, the heliostationary orbit is the he |
| netary nebulae, definition of outer space, | geostationary orbit, space debris, management of outer s |
| It is currently in a | geostationary orbit, with an apogee of 35,788 kilometres |
| r to place a communications satellite into | geostationary orbit, a thruster to provide the satellite |
| vering into a large circular orbit, e.g. a | geostationary orbit, requires a larger delta-v than an e |
| It is positioned in | geostationary orbit, and will be located at a longitude |
| cial case of the geosynchronous orbit, the | geostationary orbit, has an eccentrity of zero (meaning |
| For meteorological satellites in | geostationary orbit, see weather satellite. |
| Following its insertion into | geostationary orbit, GOES 4 was positioned at 98° West. |
| ing fuel margin to achieve its operational | geostationary orbit. |
| s needed for a payload to be placed into a | geostationary orbit. |
| , in a non-nominally mode to raise it into | geostationary orbit. |
| n object, possibly a captured asteroid, in | geostationary orbit. |
| Clarke orbit - Another name for a | geostationary orbit. |
| It will then raise itself into its final | geostationary orbit. |
| st satellite launched by the PSLV into the | Geostationary orbit. |
| al slot is 74 degree East longitude in the | Geostationary Orbit. |
| his European Meteorology satellite is in a | Geostationary orbit. |
| rst Sirius Radio satellite to be placed in | geostationary orbit; the three previous Sirius satellite |
| It is parked at the | geostationary orbital position of 7° West together with |
| Geostationary orbits are useful because they cause a sat | |
| tes and weather satellites are often given | geostationary orbits, so that the satellite antennas tha |
| he constant 0° latitude and circularity of | geostationary orbits, satellites in GEO differ in locati |
| to be able to carry extra cargo to higher | geostationary orbits. |
| The news media use the | geostationary photos in their daily weather presentation |
| The | geostationary ring is a volume segment around the geosta |
| lar the observation of space debris in the | geostationary ring and in geostationary transfer orbits, |
| This leads to the definition of the | geostationary ring as being a segment of space around th |
| Therefore, the definition of the | geostationary ring foresees a declination range from -15 |
| ce debris objects as small as 15 cm in the | geostationary ring. |
| A spherical | geostationary satellite would need to be more than 5 tim |
| Astra 1KR is a | geostationary satellite owned by SES Astra. |
| The | geostationary satellite PAN (2009-047A), along with two |
| meters reduces the latency compared with a | geostationary satellite's 44,000 mile 250ms latency. |
| ror later corrected by cross-referencing a | geostationary satellite. |
| if it was placed in the Clarke belt, where | geostationary satellites orbit. |
| Geostationary satellites cannot ordinarily be seen at al | |
| By comparison, | geostationary satellites orbit at 5.6 Earth radii and GP |
| f the connected pointing angles of all the | geostationary satellites seen from any given location on |
| ability to dock with "90% of the 450 or so | geostationary satellites in orbit," whereas MDA SIS can |
| weather satellite twice per day while the | geostationary satellites remain in one location at the e |
| While | geostationary satellites provide a continuous view of th |
| NOAA | Geostationary Satellites transmitting HRPT Weather image |
| 30 medium Earth orbit satellites and five | geostationary satellites. |
| AT 4, also known as PAS 4, was an American | geostationary spacecraft that was launched by an Ariane |
| s could launch around 2,175 kilograms into | Geostationary transfer orbit . |
| pe orbit (C3), Geosynchronous orbit (GEO), | Geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), Earth-Moon L5 Lagran |
| nt and commercial satellites, including to | Geostationary transfer orbit. |
| e and is capable of launching 2500 kg into | geostationary transfer orbit. |
| Avanti purchased for HYLAS a launch to | geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) on a Falcon 9 launch |
| Geostationary weather satellites orbit the Earth above t | |
| GOES-D before becoming operational, was a | geostationary weather satellite which was operated by th |
| orld and are available from both polar and | geostationary weather satellites. |
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