no worries, great questions! regular phones aren’t built to talk to satellites, they’re designed for nearby cell towers (4G/5G) using frequencies and antennas optimized for short distances, while satellites are hundreds or thousands of km away and need way more power and bigger antennas. dedicated satellite phones do exist (iridium, thuraya, inmarsat) and are used by sailors, mountaineers, journalists in conflict zones, rescue teams, researchers in antarctica, etc., they’re bulky and expensive. the new thing is that modern phones (iphone 14+, some samsungs/pixels) now have limited satellite connectivity, mostly for emergency SOS and short texts when off-grid. about 911: normally emergency calls still go through cell towers but they’re prioritized, even without your carrier’s signal your phone can use any available network to reach emergency services, which is why they often work when regular calls don’t. it’s not really satellite (unless you have satellite SOS enabled), just network-level priority.​​​​​​​​​​