Clarke Suggests Geosynchronous Orbit: Difference between revisions
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'''This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.''' [[Image:Arthur C. Clarke 1.jpg|thumb|center|Arthur C. Clarke. Courtesy: National Space Society]] Writer [[Arthur C. Clarke|Arthur C. Clarke]] first suggested the idea of [[Communications Satellites|communications satellites]] in geosynchronous in the October 1945 issue of ''Wireless World''. Clarke realized that a [[Radio|radio]] relay station in space could serve a huge area of the earth’s surface, like a radio tower thousands of miles high. | '''This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.''' [[Image:Arthur C. Clarke 1.jpg|thumb|center|Arthur C. Clarke. Courtesy: National Space Society]] Writer [[Arthur C. Clarke|Arthur C. Clarke]] first suggested the idea of [[Communications Satellites|communications satellites]] in geosynchronous in the October 1945 issue of ''Wireless World''. Clarke realized that a [[Radio|radio]] relay station in space could serve a huge area of the earth’s surface, like a radio tower thousands of miles high. | ||
'''See also:''' [[Beginnings of radio astronomy|Beginnings of Radio Astronomy]] | '''See also:''' [[Beginnings of radio astronomy|Beginnings of Radio Astronomy]] | ||
[[Category:Radio_communication]] [[Category:Communications]] [[Category:Satellite_communication]] |
Revision as of 21:24, 16 December 2009
This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.
Writer Arthur C. Clarke first suggested the idea of communications satellites in geosynchronous in the October 1945 issue of Wireless World. Clarke realized that a radio relay station in space could serve a huge area of the earth’s surface, like a radio tower thousands of miles high.
See also: Beginnings of Radio Astronomy