I never heard of a "satellite wave". If you mean the radio waves used by satellites for communication - well, like all radio waves used for such purposes, there is probably a large range of waves they can use.
they use radio waves to pick up some what satellite images or existance of things in space
Tablets use various types of wireless communication waves such as Wi-Fi (radio waves), Bluetooth (radio waves), and cellular (microwave) waves to connect to the internet and other devices. These waves enable tablets to send and receive data wirelessly.
It uses radio waves between the range of 2.402 and 2.480 GHz
When you use a 3G service, you're using radio to communicate with a base stationthat's never more than 2 or 3 miles away from you, and usually 1 mile or less.And by the way ... Everything that anybody can ever use an artificial satellite foris accomplished with radio waves. That's the only way anybody can send instructionsor programs to a satellite or get any data or programs from a satellite.
If the satellite is to have ANY communications, usually with Earth, it must use radio waves, or some other radiation, so yes.
One method is for the satellite to use electromagnetic waves, such as microwaves or radio waves, to transmit energy to the Earth's surface. These waves can carry information back to the satellite, enabling observation of the target area.
Radio waves are used to help transmit signals between two devices.Some devices which use radio waves are:RadiosTelevisionsMobile (cell) phonesCordless telephonesNavigational devices (such as GPS and satellite tracking)RadarRadio-tuned clocks and watchesRadio telescopes
yes,they do use radio waves
Absolutely. Computing is highly integrated into radio frequency (RF) type communications. Examples of RF integration include Bluetooth, WiFi, and RF peripherals such as the mouse and keyboard.
Bluetooth technology uses radio waves in the 2.4-2.485 GHz frequency range. Specifically, it uses frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) to minimize interference and ensure reliable communication between devices.
TVs receiving broadcast programming do, they just use it to produce both picture and sound; instead of just sound as an ordinary radio does. TVs receiving cable programming don't. TVs receiving satellite programming do, but the radio waves are in the microwave band transmitted from the satellite and received by your dish, where they are down converted via a microwave superheterodyne stage in the dish so that they are in the frequency range the TV can handle.