Weather on Earth does not affect communication satellites. The Sun does.
Want to have it proven? Watch the movie "Solar Attack". It will explain everything.
(Lightning may strike them down, too.)
2007-06-26 01:21:41
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The weather does not affect the communication satellites because weather happens in the troposphere, which is the lowest atmosphere level and the sattelites are in the exosphere, the last level. There are many more atmosphere levels between that.
2007-06-26 02:03:00
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answer #2
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answered by neophan2002 1
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I did work for NASA and have had weather affect satellite reception 1 item and that was a snow storm with a lot of wind. there has been a little degradation several times from heavy rain .
2007-06-26 03:42:03
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answer #3
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answered by JOHNNIE B 7
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The weather within the atmosphere of the earth doesn't affect them, however they might be affected by the sun.
2007-06-26 02:25:08
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answer #4
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answered by Diablo 3
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The word you're searching for is photograph voltaic Flares, from the sunlight (our celeb) With the Earth's ozone and magnetic fields around, by way of the time the photograph voltaic radiation gets to earth (frequently around 4 days) it is going to possibly no longer have an result. It won't result our climate dramatically, in the time of heritage we've continuously had them; infact, we've them familiar. The media likes to apply a fashion called "scaremongering" (the skill to furnish the ordinary public a scare) - it activates perfect gossip on issues like; "Are we going to die?" "do we be hit by way of yet another hurricane"? - the possibilities are high narrow. there's a reason our Earth is particular, it is formed and geared up to maintain us secure.
2016-10-18 22:31:20
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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weather on earth has little or no effect on them, however burst of radiation caused by solar flairs on the sun can effect them
2007-06-26 00:46:03
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answer #6
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answered by Jan Luv 7
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