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1. habine+(OP)[view] [source] 2026-02-04 12:41:52
No, they didn't. You can't "send away" thermal energy via radio waves. At the temperatures we're talking about, thermal energy is in the infrared. That's blackbody radiation.
replies(2): >>morteh+x6 >>adrian+Rn
2. morteh+x6[view] [source] 2026-02-04 13:25:58
>>habine+(OP)
Your answer makes it seem like you too missed the point. If a Starlink sends a 1000W signal to Earth, that is 1000W of power that does not heat the satellite.
3. adrian+Rn[view] [source] 2026-02-04 15:01:18
>>habine+(OP)
You missed the point.

Nobody describes a satellite by specifying the amount of heat that it produces, but by the amount of electrical energy that it consumes.

In a communication satellite, a large fraction of the consumed electrical energy goes into the radio transmitter. Radio transmitters are very efficient and most of the consumed power is emitted as radio waves and only a very small part is converted into heat, which must be handled by the cooling system.

So in any communication satellite, a significant fraction of the consumed energy does not become heat.

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