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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries

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To: Ilaine who wrote (7737)8/26/2001 3:31:30 PM
From: Don Lloyd  Read Replies (2) of 74559
 
CB -

...I agree that the size of a satellite is a matter of economics. However, it is also true that a satellite with smaller mass is subject to less gravitational pull than a satellite with larger mass, at the same altitude. So the amount of power required to maintain the orbit is part of the calculation. You can put a big satellite into a LEO orbit, but it would require more power to maintain its altitude, whether you are talking about hydrazine, photovoltaic cells, or radio-isotopic thermoelectric generators, or whatever plasma propulsion uses. ...

You're simply mistaken about the requirement to overcome gravity to maintain an orbit. Ignoring any non-ideal secondary effects, an established orbit will persist without any additional input of energy by any means. If you look carefully at the reference you posted, you will see that every use of propulsion and thrust is to change the orbit, not maintain it.

Regards, Don
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