Geostationary in a sentence as an adjective

If we build such a large stucture up to the geostationary orbit, won't it be exposed and how can it be protected?

The previous launch was a satellite to a geostationary orbit.

It's not like the government is asking for the Moon and Uber is offering a geostationary satellite.

Other satellite phones work with satellites in geostationary orbit and require a two-way dish for both broadcast and receive.

In practice it means that if you were browsing the web over a geostationary satellite link, it would take 1/2s between clicking a link and receiving the first data back from the server.

That reminds me of a euphemism that I found delightful that I heard once while working for a space company... "achieving submerged geostationary orbit," I think it was.

The cable has to be "anchored" beyond the point of geostationary orbit in order for it to pull itself taut and keep itself in orbit, else its own weight would cause it to simply fall back to Earth.

Is it especially hard to place satellites directly into geostationary orbit, or something else?

However, ion engines have received a lot of commercial development and are fairly commonly used on geostationary satellites, and there the low thrust is not a problem.

Majority of satellites are below the geostationary orbit.

They have multi-billion dollar satellites in geostationary orbits.

Why does the graphic appear to depict a range from a point low over the Indian ocean rather than a point in geostationary orbit?What possible location or ranging information could create an arc like that?

One of the core challenges with the space elevator concept is that they need a cable that can reach from the earth's surface to somewhere beyond geostationary orbit, with exactly how far depending on how they want to arrange the counterweight.

So, geostationary satellites are placed in elliptical "geostationary transfer orbits".

Geostationary definitions

adjective

of or having a geosynchronous orbit such that the position in such an orbit is fixed with respect to the earth; "a geostationary satellite"