Summary: Satellites may be used to transmit information over large distances.
      Global wireless communication relies on satellites.  Here,
      ground stations transmit to orbiting satellites that amplify the
      signal and retransmit it back to earth.  Satellites will move
      across the sky unless they are in geosynchronous
      orbits, where the time for one revolution about the
      equator exactly matches the earth's rotation time of one day.
      TV satellites would require the homeowner to continually adjust
      his or her antenna if the satellite weren't in geosynchronous
      orbit.  Newton's equations applied to orbiting bodies predict
      that the time 
In addition to delay, the propagation attenuation encountered in satellite communication far exceeds what occurs in ionospheric-mirror based communication. Calculate the attenuation incurred by radiation going to the satellite (one-way loss) with that encountered by Marconi (total going up and down). Note that the attenuation calculation in the ionospheric case, assuming the ionosphere acts like a perfect mirror, is not a straightforward application of the propagation loss formula.
	  Transmission to the satellite, known as the uplink,
	  encounters inverse-square law power losses.  Reflecting off
	  the ionosphere not only encounters the same loss, but twice.
	  Reflection is the same as transmitting exactly what arrives,
	  which means that the total loss is the product
	  of the uplink and downlink losses.  The
	  geosynchronous orbit lies at an altitude of
	  
"Electrical Engineering Digital Processing Systems in Braille."