Bugger, I can't remember what satellite radio service I had in my car when I lived in North America (and when I had a car). I seem to recall that there were two main services - was this one of them? (Maybe there are more than two now?)
Sirius and XM. Sirius uses three satellites in tundra orbits, with two usually in service at any given time. There's a 4-second delay between the two, giving receivers a better chance of filling in gaps when driving under overpasses (yet it often didn't work with my receiver, for some reason.)
XM uses several conventional geostationary satellites named "Rock", "Roll", "Rhythm" and "Blues" or something like that. They may have more now.
Both services operate in a large chunk stolen from the 2300-2450 MHz (13 cm) amateur radio band (grrr...) Not much is left of it now since WiFi has taken over 2400-2450.
When the spectrum was first assigned to direct satellite radio broadcasting, the FCC insisted on at least two competing services. Sirius and XM accepted this condition. Just a few years later they were back, begging permission to merge and claiming they would both go bankrupt soon if they weren't allowed to do so.
So now we have "Sirius XM". The infrastructure of the two services remains much the same, with two independent constellations of satellites operating on different portions of the band with incompatible modulation methods. They now duplicate the same set of program channels, wasting half the spectrum and doubling the cost of their infrastructure without any compensating redundancy advantages since each receiver can only receive one system.
Grrr.