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5 answers

Nothing would happen. Earth's rotation has nothing to do with it. Now, if the satellite stopped orbiting....

Satellites are basically in continual free fall towards the Earth. But, if they are moving fast enough, as they fall the curvature of the Earth allows them to not hit the ground, and so they whip around the planet. That's what keeps them up there; they are moving so fast. As long as nothing hits them, they will stay up there forever.

But if something interfered with their path, so they were not moving as fast around the planet any more, they would plummet to the surface, just the same way as anything falls to Earth, by gravity.

2007-01-29 10:22:21 · answer #1 · answered by acafrao341 5 · 1 0

Very little, in terms of the satellites themselves. However, if the earth did suddenly stop rotating in an instant, the planet would break apart into millions chunks and fly into space at a tangential path to it's rotational velocity causing those satellites to be obliterated. Rotation has an extremely minute effect on gravity, so the path of satellites would not be significantly effected (other than the flying houses and people).

2007-01-29 10:19:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous 3 · 1 0

Moon ranges and eclipses might desire to do no longer with the rotation of the earth however the orbit of the moon. If the moon persevered to revolve around the earth, it may nevertheless have ranges. There could nevertheless be eclipses. The timing could be diverse, inspite of the shown fact that. It takes 29 a million/2 days for the moon to bypass around the earth. so which you does not see the moon upward push each nighttime. it may take approximately 15 days for it to bypass from one horizon to the different, after which you does not see it for yet another 15 days. of direction if the earth wasn't rotating, it does not be 15 days, there could be no days. 8^) If synthetic satellites stored revolving around the earth, those too could bypass on as earlier. The earth is in an orbit around the solar. meaning that centrifugal tension balances the pull of the solar's gravitation. So if the earth stopped revolving around the solar it may 'fall into' the solar and be destroyed. yet your question seems in basic terms to might desire to do with the moon, so it is beside the point. 8^)

2016-12-16 16:30:14 · answer #3 · answered by hirschfeld 4 · 0 0

There are two types of sattelites. One is geostationary sattelite and the other is the geo-orbiting sattelite. A satellite that remains above a fixed location on the Earth's surface, usually about 36,000 km above the equator. It is limited in view, approximately 60° either side of the equator.
Where as the others revolve around the earth at a predecided speed. If the earth stopped spinning. The geostationary sattelites will also start to move around the earth

2007-01-29 10:23:01 · answer #4 · answered by anecentric 2 · 0 1

They would keep on orbiting but they would travel over the same track on the surface from then on.
Geosynchronous satellites would start moving around the surface making them also useless.

2007-01-30 01:18:06 · answer #5 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

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