Satellite vs Payload - What's the difference?
satellite | payload |
A moon or other smaller body orbiting a larger one.
A man-made apparatus designed to be placed in orbit around a celestial body, generally to relay information, data etc. to Earth.
A country, state, office, building etc. which is under the jurisdiction, influence, or domination of another body.
* , II.3:
* 1826 , (Walter Scott), ,
* 1948 , Willard E. Hawkins, The Technique of Fiction: A Basic Course in Story Writing ,
(colloquial, uncountable) Satellite TV; reception of television broadcasts via services that utilize man-made satellite technology.
That part of a cargo that produces revenue
The total weight of passengers, crew, equipment and cargo carried by an aircraft or spacecraft
That part of a rocket, missile, propelled stinger or torpedo that is not concerned with propulsion or guidance, such as a warhead or satellite.
(computing) The functional part of a computer virus rather than the part that spreads it
(communication) The actual data in a data stream
As nouns the difference between satellite and payload
is that satellite is a moon or other smaller body orbiting a larger one while payload is that part of a cargo that produces revenue.satellite
English
Noun
(en noun)- The Moon is a natural satellite of the Earth.
- A spent upper stage is a derelict satellite .
- Many telecommunication satellites orbit at 36000km above the equator.
- We read in the Bible, that Nicanor'' the persecutor of Gods Law.
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- The unnamed chronicler in his Dupin stories was the first Dr. Watson type of satellite —a narrator who accompanies the detective on his exploits, exclaims over his brilliance.
- Do you have satellite at your house?
