Satellite Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Satellite stocks.

Satellite Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 GSAT Globalstar Partner Spotter Achieves Milestone of Over 30,000 Satellite IoT Collars Deployed Across Central Asia
Nov 21 SIDU Sidus Space and Reflex Aerospace Sign Letter of Intent at Space Tech Expo Europe to Advance Dual-Use Satellite Development Across U.S. and European Markets
Nov 21 PL Cango And 2 Other Promising US Penny Stocks
Nov 21 VSAT ViaSat price target lowered to $9 from $24 at Barclays
Nov 20 PL Planet and Global Fishing Watch Expand Collaboration for Ocean Transparency and Accountability
Nov 19 PL Planet to Announce Fiscal Third Quarter 2025 Results on Monday, December 9, 2024
Nov 19 RKLB Is Rocket Lab’s (NASDAQ:RKLB) Rally Just Getting Started?
Nov 19 RKLB Rocket Lab Director Sells $96.7M in Shares Following a 240% Stock Price Surge
Nov 19 GSAT Globalstar to Host Analyst & Investor Day on December 12, 2024
Nov 18 GSAT Globalstar plans to shift listing to Nasdaq, announces reverse stock split
Nov 18 GSAT Globalstar to execute reverse stock split, uplist to Nasdaq
Nov 18 GSAT Globalstar Announces Plans to Transfer Its Stock Listing to Uplist on Nasdaq
Nov 18 GSAT Apple ups satellite investment stakes with latest Globalstar deal
Nov 17 RKLB Rocket Lab And Hut 8 Mining Are Among Top 7 Mid-Cap Gainers Last Week (November 11-15): Are The Others In Your Portfolio?
Nov 15 ASTC Astrotech First Quarter 2025 Earnings: US$2.01 loss per share (vs US$1.79 loss in 1Q 2024)
Nov 15 RKLB SpaceX Caught a Rocket With ‘Chopsticks.’ What Will It Try Next?
Satellite

In the context of spaceflight, a satellite is an artificial object which has been intentionally placed into orbit. Such objects are sometimes called artificial satellites to distinguish them from natural satellites such as Earth's Moon.
On 4 October 1957 the Soviet Union launched the world's first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1. Since then, about 8,100 satellites from more than 40 countries have been launched. According to a 2018 estimate, some 4,900 remain in orbit, of those about 1,900 were operational; while the rest have lived out their useful lives and become space debris. Approximately 500 operational satellites are in low-Earth orbit, 50 are in medium-Earth orbit (at 20,000 km), and the rest are in geostationary orbit (at 36,000 km). A few large satellites have been launched in parts and assembled in orbit. Over a dozen space probes have been placed into orbit around other bodies and become artificial satellites to the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, a few asteroids, a comet and the Sun.
Satellites are used for many purposes. Among several other applications, they can be used to make star maps and maps of planetary surfaces, and also take pictures of planets they are launched into. Common types include military and civilian Earth observation satellites, communications satellites, navigation satellites, weather satellites, and space telescopes. Space stations and human spacecraft in orbit are also satellites. Satellite orbits vary greatly, depending on the purpose of the satellite, and are classified in a number of ways. Well-known (overlapping) classes include low Earth orbit, polar orbit, and geostationary orbit.
A launch vehicle is a rocket that places a satellite into orbit. Usually, it lifts off from a launch pad on land. Some are launched at sea from a submarine or a mobile maritime platform, or aboard a plane (see air launch to orbit).
Satellites are usually semi-independent computer-controlled systems. Satellite subsystems attend many tasks, such as power generation, thermal control, telemetry, attitude control and orbit control.

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