ABS-3A
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|
Mission type
| Communications
|
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Operator
| ABS
|
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COSPAR ID
| 2015-010A
[1]
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SATCAT
no.
| 40424
[1]
|
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Mission duration
| 15 years (planned)
|
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|
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Bus
| Boeing 702SP
|
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Manufacturer
| Boeing
|
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Launch mass
| 4,354 pounds (1,975 kg)
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Dry mass
| 3,759 pounds (1,705 kg)
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Power
| >10.9kW at 15 years
|
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|
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Launch date
| March 2, 2015, 03:50
(
2015-03-02UTC03:50Z
)
UTC
|
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Rocket
| Falcon 9 v1.1
|
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Launch site
| Cape Canaveral
SLC-40
|
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Contractor
| SpaceX
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Reference system
| Geocentric
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Regime
| Geostationary
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Longitude
| 3° West
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|
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Band
| 24
K
u
band
, 24
C band
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Frequency
| 13.750-14.750 / 10.700-11.200,
11.450-11.700, 12.500-12.750 (Ku band), 5.850-6.425/3.625-4.200 (C band)
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Bandwidth
| 72 MHz (Ku band, C band)
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TWTA power
| 150 watts (Ku band),70 watts (C band)
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ABS-3A
is a
communications satellite
operated by
ABS
(formerly known as
Asia Broadcast Satellite
), providing coverage in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
[2]
It is positioned in geostationary orbit at 3° West, and offers C and Ku-band payload capacity to support video, data, mobility and government applications. The satellite is the first commercial communications satellite in orbit to use electric propulsion, providing a significant weight savings.
[3]
Manufacture and specifications
[
edit
]
The satellite was designed and manufactured by
Boeing
, and is a
Boeing 702SP
model communication satellite.
[4]
It will be located at 3 degrees West
longitude
.
[2]
It was launched on board a
SpaceX
Falcon 9
rocket on 2 March 2015 (UTC time).
The satellite is propelled solely by
electrically powered spacecraft propulsion
, with the on-board thrusters used for both
geostationary orbit
insertion and
station keeping
.
The satellite is based on the
Boeing 702
satellite bus
, and was launched along with
Eutelsat 115 West B
, which is based on the same bus. The satellite had a launch mass of 4,354 pounds (1,975 kg).
[5]
The satellite utilizes three
C-band
beams and four
Ku-band
beams. The C-band beams cover the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Additionally, the C-band can be used globally. The Ku-band beams extend across Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, and South Africa, as well as providing further coverage of the Americas.
[2]
Launch
[
edit
]
The launch occurred on March 2, 2015 at 03:50 UTC and the satellite has been deployed in the planned
supersynchronous
transfer orbit.
[6]
[7]
The launch is also notable for being the first flight of Boeing's stacked satellite configuration for the Boeing 702SP,
[8]
a configuration Boeing designed specifically to take advantage of the SpaceX
Falcon 9 v1.1
capabilities.
[4]
On-orbit operations
[
edit
]
The satellite became fully operational as a
geosynchronous
communications satellite
by 10 September 2015 after a handover from Boeing to ABS for on-orbit operations on 31 August 2015, approximately one month earlier than planned.
[9]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
"ABS 3A Satellite details 2015-010A NORAD 40424"
. N2YO. 19 March 2015
. Retrieved
19 March
2015
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Satellite Fleet ABS-3A"
.
Asia Broadcast Satellite
. Archived from
the original
on 6 February 2018
. Retrieved
27 February
2015
.
- ^
Clark, Stephen (1 March 2015).
"Boeing's first two all-electric satellites ready for launch"
. Spaceflight Now
. Retrieved
2 March
2015
.
- ^
a
b
Svitak, Amy (10 March 2014).
"SpaceX Says Falcon 9 To Compete For EELV This Year"
.
Aviation Week
. Archived from
the original
on 2014-03-10
. Retrieved
2015-02-28
.
But the Falcon 9 is not just changing the way launch-vehicle providers do business; its reach has gone further, prompting satellite makers and commercial fleet operators to retool business plans in response to the low-cost rocket. In March 2012, Boeing announced the start of a new line of all-electric telecommunications spacecraft, the 702SP, which are designed to launch in pairs on a Falcon 9 v1.1. Anchor customers Asia Broadcast Satellite (ABS) of Hong Kong and Mexico's SatMex plan to loft the first two of four such spacecraft on a Falcon 9 in December in a launch window that opens this year, though SatMex owner Eutelsat said last month that the launch has moved to early 2015. Using electric rather than chemical propulsion will mean the satellites take months, rather than weeks, to reach their final orbital destination. But because all-electric spacecraft are about 40% lighter than their conventional counterparts, the cost to launch them is considerably less than that for a chemically propelled satellite.
- ^
Bergin, Chris (25 February 2015).
"Legless Falcon 9 conducts Static Fire test ahead of Sunday launch"
.
NASASpaceFlight
. Retrieved
27 February
2015
.
- ^
"EUTELSAT 115 West B launched successfully into space"
.
Eutelsat
. 2 March 2015. Archived from
the original
on 4 March 2015
. Retrieved
3 March
2015
.
- ^
Graham, William (1 March 2015).
"SpaceX Falcon 9 launches debut dual satellite mission"
.
NASASpaceFlight
. Retrieved
3 March
2015
.
- ^
Climer, John.
"Boeing: Stacked Satellites Tested for the Rigors of Space"
.
Boeing
. Retrieved
26 February
2015
.
- ^
Boeing: World’s First All-Electric Propulsion Satellite Begins Operations
, Boeing press release, 10 September 2015, accessed 2015-10-31.
External links
[
edit
]
|
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January
| |
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February
| |
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March
| |
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April
| |
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May
|
- Mexsat-1
- USA-261
/
X-37 OTV-4
,
LightSail-1
,
USS Langley
,
BRICSat-P
,
ParkinsonSat
,
GEARRS-2
,
AeroCube
8A, 8B,
OptiCube
1, 2, 3
- DirecTV-15
,
SKY Mexico
-1
|
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June
| |
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July
| |
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August
| |
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September
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October
| |
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November
| |
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December
| |
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Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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