Why was Svalbard chosen as the location for the satellite station?

Why was Svalbard chosen as the location for the satellite station?

Svalbard was chosen because of its high latitude from which every polar-orbiting satellite above 500 kilometers (310 mi) can be seen on every revolution as the earth rotates within its orbital plane.

Can you be buried in Svalbard?

It dates back to the 1950s when Svalbard locals made an alarming discovery. Namely, they realized that bodies of the dead that were buried underground weren’t decomposing. Cremated burials are still allowed on the island, but they require a state license. No other burial types are allowed.

What does a ground station do?

A ground station, Earth station, or Earth terminal is a terrestrial radio station designed for extraplanetary telecommunication with spacecraft (constituting part of the ground segment of the spacecraft system), or reception of radio waves from astronomical radio sources.

Who signed the Svalbard Treaty?

Norway
Treaty between Norway, The United States of America, Denmark, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Great Britain and Ireland and the British overseas Dominions and Sweden concerning Spitsbergen signed in Paris 9th February 1920.

Is Dying illegal in Norway?

Contrary to popular beliefs, it is not illegal to die in the town of Longyearbyen, Norway. There are simply no options for burial there, and terminally ill residents are flown to Oslo to live their last days.

How much does a ground station cost?

AWS Ground Station is billed in per-minute increments.

Contact TypePricing
Narrowband Reserved$3 per minute
Wideband Reserved$10 per minute
Narrowband On-Demand$10 per minute
Wideband On-Demand$22 per minute

What is AWS satellite ground station?

AWS Ground Station is a fully managed service that lets you control satellite communications, process data, and scale your operations without having to worry about building or managing your own ground station infrastructure. Ground stations form the core of global satellite networks.

Does Russia own Svalbard?

Since 1932 the Russian state-owned Arktikugol Trust (Russian for “Arctic Coal”) has been operating on Svalbard and the main economic activity in Barentsburg is coal mining by Arktikugol. The coal is usually exported to Northern European buyers.

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