AsiaSat 5

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AsiaSat 5 is a Chinese communications satellite, which will be operated by the Hong Kong based Asia Satellite Telecommunications Company. It will be positioned in geostationary orbit at a longitude of 100.5° East of the Greenwich Meridian, where it will replace the older AsiaSat 2 spacecraft.[1] It will be used to provide fixed satellite services, including broadcasting, telephone and broadband VSAT communications, to Asia and the Pacific Ocean.[2]

AsiaSat 5
Jenis misiCommunications
OperatorAsiaSat
COSPAR ID2009-042A
SATCAT no.35696Sunting di Wikidata
Situs webAsiaSat Fleet
Durasi misi15 years
Properti wahana
BusLS-1300LL
ProdusenSpace Systems/Loral
Massa luncur3.760 kilogram (8.290 pon)
Awal misi
Tanggal luncur11 August 2009, 19:47 (11 August 2009, 19:47) UTC
Roket peluncurProton-M/Briz-M
Tempat peluncuranBaikonur 200/39
KontraktorILS
Parameter orbit
Sistem rujukanGeocentric
Sistem orbitGeostationary
Bujur orbit100.5° East
Periode24 hours
Transponder
Pita26 G/H band
14 J band
 

AsiaSat 5 was built by Space Systems/Loral, and is based on the LS-1300LL satellite bus.[2] It is being launched by International Launch Services, using a Proton-M rocket with a Briz-M upper stage. The launch was conducted from Site 200/39 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, at 19:47 GMT on 11 August 2009. The Briz-M separated from the Proton-M nine minutes and forty one seconds into the flight, and AsiaSat 5 will separate from the Briz-M into a geosynchronous transfer orbit nine hours and fifteen minutes after liftoff.[3] It will then raise itself into its final geostationary orbit.

The launch was originally scheduled to be conducted by Land Launch, using a Zenit-3SLB carrier rocket. The satellite was subsequently re-awarded to ILS after Land Launch were unable to guarantee that the satellite could be launched by August 2009, in order to be in orbit before AsiaSat 2 ceased operations.[4][5]

At launch, AsiaSat 5 had a mass of 3.760 kilogram (8.290 pon),[3] and was expected to operate for fifteen years. It carries 26 G/H band and 14 J band transponders (NATO frequency designation system, US IEEE C and Ku bands respectively).[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "AsiaSat 5". Satellite Fleet. AsiaSat. Diakses tanggal 2009-08-02. 
  2. ^ a b Krebs, Gunter. "AsiaSat 5, 5C". Gunter's Space Page. Diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 27 June 2009. Diakses tanggal 2009-08-02. 
  3. ^ a b "Mission Overview" (PDF). AsiaSat 5. International Launch Services. Diakses tanggal 2009-08-02. 
  4. ^ "ILS Announces 9 New Proton Missions in First Half of 2009". Reuters. 2009-06-15. Diakses tanggal 2009-08-11. 
  5. ^ Clark, Stephen (2009-04-03). "Multi-tasking satellite deployed by 50th ILS Proton". Diakses tanggal 2009-08-11. 

Templat:Orbital launches in 2009

Templat:Communications-satellite-stub