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.

Arthur C. Clarke. Courtesy: National Space Society

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