Satellite TV services and coverage area for mobile antennas
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Satellite television signals are broadcast from satellites in the Geostationary orbit 22,000 miles above the equator. They beam TV signals towards land where the bulk of subscribers are found, so reception from land is easy to receive and requires an antenna no larger than 18 inches in diameter. However, larger antennas are required for mariners because the TV signals “bleed” out over coastal waters and the signal strength weakens the further offshore a vessel travels. Signal strength also varies from satellite service to service, where services such as DirecTV Latin America broadcast a weaker signal than say, Dish Network.
Satellite TV services change throughout different areas of the continental United States, but most subscribers usually choose between DirecTV or Dish Network for their television programming. In other areas of the world programming can be provided by services such as Bell TV that brings programming to Canada, or Sky Mexico that provides service to Mexico, Central America, and the Western Caribbean, or DIRECTV Latin America that offers programming to the Eastern Caribbean and most of South America. Regional services offer coverage in Europe and elsewhere.
Satellite TV services also feature different elements, one in particular being that the polarization of their signals differ among some services. For example, the satellite TV services supporting the U.S. and Canada broadcast signals are circularly polarized. As a result, the same antenna configuration is capable of receiving any of these signals, though it will require a receiver for the chosen service. However, SKY Latin America and the European services broadcast signals that are linearly polarized. To receive their signals, the same satellite TV antenna is used but a component known as the Low Noise Block (LNB) would have to be changed.
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