Types of Satellites — From GPS to Telescopes 🛰️
Simple, visual UPSC notes on all 4 satellite types — what they do, which orbits they use, India's key satellites, and updated 2025–26 current affairs including NavIC crisis, Aditya-L1, and ISRO's growing launches.
What is a Satellite? (Simple Explanation)
A satellite is anything that orbits (goes around) a larger object in space. The Moon is Earth's natural satellite. Artificial satellites are machines we launch into space to do specific jobs — communicate, navigate, observe, and explore.
Think of satellites as workers posted in the sky — each with a different job. The communication satellite is like a post office in the sky relaying calls and TV. The navigation satellite is like a GPS pointer. The Earth observation satellite is like a security camera watching the planet. And the astronomical satellite is like a scientist with a powerful telescope placed above Earth's cloudy atmosphere.
India's space agency ISRO operates all four types of satellites — making India one of only a handful of countries with end-to-end satellite capability.
Communication Satellites
Relay telephone calls, TV broadcasts, internet signals, and weather data. Placed high in GEO (35,786 km) for wide coverage, or in LEO constellations for low-latency internet (like Starlink).
Navigation Satellites
Provide GPS — your precise location on Earth. Send timing and position signals from space. India's NavIC, USA's GPS, Russia's GLONASS, China's BeiDou, EU's Galileo are all navigation systems.
Earth Observation Satellites
Monitor Earth from space — track weather, map forests, monitor floods, spy on military activity, measure crop health. Use cameras, radar, and infrared sensors to capture Earth's surface.
Astronomical Satellites
Giant telescopes placed in space above Earth's atmosphere — which blocks many types of radiation. Observe galaxies, black holes, X-rays, UV rays, and infrared that cannot be seen from ground.
Satellite Orbits — Visualised
| Orbit | Altitude | Key Feature | Used For | India Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LEO Low Earth Orbit |
160–2,000 km | Low latency, high image resolution, fast orbital period (~90 min) | Internet constellations (Starlink), spy satellites, ISS, Earth imaging | Cartosat, EOS (some), AstroSat, SpaDeX |
| SSO Sun-Synchronous |
~400–900 km (polar LEO) | Always passes same location at same local solar time → consistent lighting for photos | Earth observation, remote sensing, weather, mapping | Cartosat, Resourcesat, EOS-01, EOS-04 |
| MEO Medium Earth Orbit |
2,000–35,786 km | Covers large area, used for navigation signals, longer orbital period | Navigation/GPS systems | NavIC satellites (partial MEO), GPS (20,200 km) |
| GEO Geostationary |
35,786 km | Appears stationary above Earth — same spot always. Wide coverage. High latency (signal travels 72,000 km round trip) | TV broadcast, communication, weather monitoring | INSAT-3D/3DR/3DS, GSAT series, CMS-01/02 |
| L-Points Lagrange Points |
~1.5 million km (L1) | Gravitational balance between Sun and Earth — satellite stays fixed relative to both | Solar observation, deep space | Aditya-L1 (India's solar observatory at L1) |
Communication Satellites
How they work: Communication satellites act as relay stations in space. A ground station sends a signal up (uplink) to the satellite. The satellite's transponder — a combined transmitter-receiver — amplifies the signal and sends it back down (downlink) to receivers far away on Earth. Without satellites, long-distance TV, phone calls across oceans, and internet in remote areas would be impossible.
- GEO satellites (35,786 km): Wide coverage, stable signal, best for TV/broadcasting. But high latency (signal takes ~0.24 seconds one way). INSAT and GSAT series are here.
- LEO constellations (550–1,200 km): Low latency, high speed — ideal for internet. Starlink (4,200+ satellites), OneWeb (648 planned). India's Tata Sky Broadband plans LEO satellite internet.
- INSAT system: One of Asia-Pacific's largest satellite communication systems. Provides TV, telephone, disaster warning, weather broadcasting across India.
- GSAT-31: Provides high-speed internet with Ku-band transponders across India.
- Transponder bands: C-band (weather, broadcast), Ku-band (DTH TV, internet), Ka-band (high-speed broadband).
Navigation Satellites — GPS, NavIC & Global Systems
How GPS works (simple): Your phone receives signals from at least 4 satellites simultaneously. Each signal tells you how far you are from that satellite (using the time the signal took to arrive at the speed of light). With 4 distances, your phone can calculate exactly where you are in 3D space. It's like triangulation with satellites instead of cell towers.
- GPS (USA): Global coverage. 24+ satellites in MEO at ~20,200 km. Accurate to ~20 m (civilian), much more for military. Most widely used.
- GLONASS (Russia): Global. ~24 satellites. Often combined with GPS in phones for better accuracy.
- Galileo (EU): Global. 30 satellites. Civilian accuracy: 1 m with authentication. Funded by European Union.
- BeiDou (China): Global (third generation). 35 satellites. China's strategic alternative to GPS.
- NavIC (India): Regional — covers India + 1,500 km around. 7 satellites (3 GEO + 4 GSO). Accuracy: 5 m in India. India's GPS independence. Guided Pinaka rockets, fishing boats, airline navigation.
🌍 Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) — Comparison
| System | Country | Type | Satellites | Orbit | Accuracy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GPS | 🇺🇸 USA | Global | 24+ | MEO, 20,200 km | ~20 m (civilian) |
| GLONASS | 🇷🇺 Russia | Global | ~24 | MEO, 19,100 km | ~5–10 m |
| Galileo | 🇪🇺 EU | Global | 30 | MEO, 23,222 km | ~1 m (civilian) |
| BeiDou (BDS) | 🇨🇳 China | Global | 35 | MEO + GEO + IGSO | ~10 m |
| NavIC (IRNSS) | 🇮🇳 India | Regional | 7 (3 GEO + 4 GSO) | GEO + GSO | 5 m (India) |
| QZSS | 🇯🇵 Japan | Regional | 4 | GSO | Augments GPS |
Earth Observation Satellites
How they work: EOS satellites carry sensors — optical cameras, synthetic aperture radar (SAR), and infrared detectors — that observe Earth's surface from above. They fly in a Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit so they always photograph the same location at the same local time, ensuring consistent lighting for comparison over months and years.
- Remote Sensing: Detecting characteristics of an area by measuring its reflected/emitted radiation — without physically visiting. Foundation of modern GIS, mapping, and environmental monitoring.
- Cartosat series (ISRO): High-resolution land mapping, urban planning, defence surveillance. Cartosat-3 has 25 cm resolution — can see objects the size of a football from space.
- Resourcesat series: Forest cover mapping, agricultural monitoring, mineral identification, water body mapping.
- EOS-04 (RISAT-1A): SAR radar satellite — works through clouds and darkness. Invaluable for flood monitoring, agriculture in monsoon months, military surveillance.
- Oceansat (ISRO): Maps ocean currents, wind speed, phytoplankton — valuable for fishermen navigation and ocean science.
- INSAT-3D/3DR/3DS: Meteorological satellites — weather forecasting, disaster warning systems (cyclones, floods).
Astronomical Satellites — Telescopes in Space
Why space telescopes? Earth's atmosphere blocks many types of electromagnetic radiation — X-rays, ultraviolet, infrared — preventing ground telescopes from seeing them. Space telescopes above the atmosphere can detect X-rays from black holes, UV from hot stars, and infrared from distant galaxies that ground telescopes simply cannot. Also: no clouds, no light pollution, no atmospheric blurring.
- Hubble Space Telescope (NASA/ESA, 1990): In LEO at 547 km. Revolutionised astronomy — deep field images showed thousands of galaxies. Still operating. Famous for its images of nebulae, galaxies, and exoplanet atmospheres.
- James Webb Space Telescope (JWST, 2022): At L2 point (1.5 million km). Largest, most powerful space telescope. Infrared — sees earliest galaxies formed 300 million years after Big Bang. Shows star-forming regions invisible to Hubble.
- AstroSat (ISRO, 2015): India's first dedicated space telescope. Simultaneously observes in X-ray, UV, and optical — unique multi-wavelength capability. Studies black holes, neutron stars, pulsars. Placed in LEO at 650 km.
- Aditya-L1 (ISRO, 2023): India's first solar observatory — not technically an astronomy satellite but placed at Sun-Earth Lagrange Point 1 (L1, 1.5 million km from Earth) to study Sun's corona, solar winds, and space weather.
- Climate/Biosatellites (sub-types): NASA's Aqua (studies Earth's water cycle), Bion series (Russia — studies biology in space), GRACE (maps gravity for groundwater).
India's Key Satellites — ISRO
Launched Feb 2024. Advanced weather satellite with improved sensors. Enhances disaster warning, search & rescue, meteorology for India.
High-speed internet connectivity across India using Ku-band. In GEO. Supplements DTH services and enterprise broadband.
Communication satellites providing DTH, VSAT, and broadband services. Part of ISRO's commercial satellite series.
First 2nd-gen NavIC satellite. Indigenous atomic clock. Added L1 band for smartphone compatibility. Launched on GSLV.
Launched Jan 29, 2025 — 100th launch from Sriharikota. But suffered engine failure in orbit. Unable to reach intended GEO position.
SAR (radar) imaging satellite. Works through clouds and night. Vital for floods, agriculture (monsoon monitoring), and defence.
25 cm resolution — highest by any ISRO satellite. Urban mapping, border surveillance, infrastructure monitoring. In SSO LEO.
Agriculture, forest cover, water bodies, drought monitoring. LISS-3 and AWiFS cameras. Used by multiple government ministries.
India's first space telescope. Multi-wavelength (X-ray + UV + optical). Studies black holes, neutron stars. Still operational in 2025.
India's first solar observatory. At Sun-Earth L1 point. Studies solar corona, solar wind, space weather. Continuously observes Sun 24/7.
Space Docking Experiment. Successfully tested in-orbit docking Jan 2025. India 4th country to master docking technology. Key for future Gaganyaan and space station.
NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar. Joint mission. Most advanced SAR satellite ever built. Will map entire Earth every 12 days with 3–10 cm accuracy for earthquakes, glaciers, forests.
Current Affairs — 2024, 2025 & 2026
Jan 2025NVS-02 Launch — 100th from Sriharikota
India launched NVS-02 NavIC satellite on January 29, 2025 aboard GSLV-F15 — the 100th rocket launch from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota. Mission: replace IRNSS-1E and strengthen NavIC. However, NVS-02 suffered a pyro valve failure and could not reach its intended orbit. Failure Analysis Committee reported in October 2025.
2025–26NavIC Crisis — 3 of 11 Satellites Working
As of March 2026, only 3 of 11 NavIC satellites are operational — below the minimum 4 needed for navigation. 5 IRNSS satellites completely defunct (all atomic clocks failed). NVS-02 failed in orbit Feb 2025. India urgently needs to launch NVS-03, 04, 05 to restore full NavIC capability.
Feb 2024INSAT-3DS — Advanced Weather Satellite
ISRO launched INSAT-3DS in February 2024 — India's most advanced meteorological satellite. Enhanced disaster warning, cyclone tracking, and search-and-rescue support. Successor to INSAT-3D and INSAT-3DR. Six-payload satellite with advanced sounding and imaging sensors.
Dec 2024SpaDeX — India Masters Docking Technology
ISRO launched SpaDeX (Space Docking Experiment) on December 30, 2024. Successfully performed in-orbit docking on January 16, 2025. India became the 4th country to demonstrate this capability (after USA, Russia, China). Critical for Gaganyaan crewed mission and future space station assembly.
2023 — ActiveAditya-L1 — India's Solar Observatory
India's first solar observatory reached its destination at Sun-Earth Lagrange Point 1 (L1) in January 2024 — 1.5 million km from Earth. Continuously monitors the Sun's corona, solar flares, and solar wind. In December 2025, ISRO published breakthrough research in the Astrophysical Journal on the October 2024 major solar storm using Aditya-L1 data.
UpcomingNISAR — NASA-ISRO SAR Satellite
NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) — scheduled for launch in 2025 on GSLV. Most advanced Earth observation SAR satellite ever built. Will map entire Earth's surface every 12 days. Applications: earthquake monitoring, glacier melt, forest health, groundwater, oil spills. Joint NASA-ISRO mission worth ~$1.5 billion.
Dec 2024LVM3 Launches AST SpaceMobile Satellite
ISRO's LVM3 rocket launched AST SpaceMobile's Bluebird Block-2 satellite on December 24, 2024 — the largest commercial communications array in LEO (2,400 sq ft). Designed for direct-to-smartphone 4G/5G broadband from space. Shows ISRO's growing commercial launch business.
2025Starlink & India LEO Internet Race
Starlink (SpaceX) and OneWeb are competing for India's LEO satellite internet market. Starlink has 4,200+ satellites in LEO. India finalised spectrum allocation policy for satellite internet in 2023. Reliance Jio (SES) and Amazon Kuiper also planning Indian market entry. LEO internet can reach India's remote areas unreachable by fibre.
Prelims Practice MCQs
Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
1. Geostationary launch vehicles are used to place communication satellites in GEO.
2. PSLV is also used for launching Earth observation satellites in Sun-Synchronous Orbit.
3. NavIC satellites are placed in MEO like GPS satellites.
Which of the above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 (b) 2 only (c) 1 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
(a) 2012 (b) 2013 (c) 2015 (d) 2016
Memory Tricks & Quick Facts
| Fact | Answer |
|---|---|
| GEO altitude (must know) | 35,786 km above Earth |
| LEO range | 160–2,000 km |
| GPS satellite altitude | ~20,200 km (MEO) |
| India's navigation system | NavIC = Navigation with Indian Constellation |
| NavIC constellation | 3 GEO + 4 GSO = 7 satellites |
| NavIC coverage | India + 1,500 km around it |
| NavIC accuracy | 5 m (GPS = 20 m civilian) |
| NVS-02 launch + outcome | Launched Jan 29, 2025; failed in orbit (engine valve issue) |
| NavIC operational satellites (Mar 2026) | 3 of 11 (below minimum of 4) |
| India's first space telescope | AstroSat (2015) — X-ray/UV/optical |
| India's solar observatory | Aditya-L1 — at L1 point (2023) |
| World's largest space telescope | JWST (James Webb) — infrared, at L2 |
| EO orbit type | Sun-Synchronous (SSO/Polar) |
| India's high-res EO satellite | Cartosat-3 (25 cm resolution) |
| Starlink constellation (SpaceX) | 4,200+ satellites in LEO at ~550 km |
| SpaDeX milestone (Jan 2025) | India = 4th country to master orbital docking |
| INSAT system | One of Asia-Pacific's largest communication satellite systems |
Conclusion & FAQs
🛰️ Satellites — India's Eyes, Ears, and Voice in Space
Satellites are no longer just technology — they are critical infrastructure as essential as roads and power lines. They tell fishermen where fish are, guide missiles to targets, warn cities about cyclones approaching, help farmers decide when to irrigate, and let scientists peer at galaxies 13 billion light-years away.
India has built one of the world's most comprehensive satellite ecosystems — communication (INSAT/GSAT), navigation (NavIC), Earth observation (Cartosat/EOS/Resourcesat), and astronomy (AstroSat/Aditya-L1). The SpaDeX docking milestone in January 2025 opens the door to India's space station and crewed Moon mission by 2040.
However, the NavIC crisis (only 3 of 11 satellites operational as of March 2026) is a warning that building space capability isn't enough — maintaining it requires consistent investment, rapid replenishment, and indigenous technology (like the atomic clocks ISRO is now developing domestically after imported ones failed).


