Group of communications satellites
Astra 28.2°E
is the name for the group of
Astra
communications satellites
co-located at the 28.2° East position in the
Clarke Belt
that are owned and operated by
SES
based in
Betzdorf, Luxembourg
. It is one of the major TV satellite positions serving Europe (the others being at
19.2° East
, 13° East,
23.5° East
, and
5° East
).
The Astra satellites at 28.2° East provide for services
downlinking
in the 10.70?12.70 GHz range of the
K
u
band
.
Satellite craft in use
[
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]
Current
[
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]
Previous
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Market
[
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The satellites at the Astra 28.2°E position primarily provide digital TV, digital radio and multimedia services to the UK and Republic of Ireland, broadcasting more than 470 TV, radio and interactive channels to homes in the UK and Ireland.
[4]
The majority of these channels broadcast as part of
British Sky Broadcasting
’s
Sky Digital
pay-TV platform or the
free-to-air
Freesat
platform, and they include free-to-air and encrypted
high definition television
(HDTV) channels.
At this position, Astra 2F also provides capacity on a spot beam deployed on West Africa, and Astra 2E provides a beam across the Middle East.
[5]
Capacity and reach
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As of December 2019
[update]
the Astra satellites at 28.2° east broadcast on 305 transponders (11 Ka-band and 294 Ku-band) to 45.7 million households (23.8 million via
cable
, 9.2 million via
IPTV
and 12.7 million direct to home
satellite dishes
).
[6]
History
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This position was the second orbital position used by SES (after
Astra 19.2°E
) and the first to provide only digital channels. The first craft to occupy this position was
Astra 1D
, relocated from Astra 19.2°E in March 1998 to provide capacity for testing UK digital TV transmissions before the start of Sky Digital (originally slated for June 1998 but then delayed until October 1998).
[7]
Following the successful launch of
Astra 2A
to the Astra 28.2°E position on August 30, 1998, Astra 1D was returned to 19.2°E in October 1998.
Sirius 3
, from Nordic Satellite AB (later,
SES Sirius
then incorporated in SES) was leased to SES immediately after its launch on October 5, 1998, for a period of 12 months (after which it was moved to its original destination of 5°E) to provide further capacity at 28.2°E for the expanding Sky Digital service and to back up Astra 2A, pending the launch of
Astra 2B
on September 14, 2000.
[7]
Although
Astra 2C
was built for the Astra 28.2°E position, it was first deployed after launch in 2001 at 19.2°E where it provided pan-European capacity pending the launch of
Astra 1L
. Astra 2C was moved to the Astra 28.2°E position in August 2007. In March 2009, SES announced that in April, Astra 2C was to be moved to
Astra 31.5°E
to temporarily take over the mission of
Astra 5A
which had failed in orbit, and to remain at Astra 31.5°E for about one year until
Astra 3B
was launched to
Astra 23.5°E
, when another craft at that position could be released to Astra 31.5°E and Astra 2C returned to 28.2° east.
[8]
The move of Astra 2C to Astra 31.5°E was completed on May 11.
[9]
Astra 3B was brought into operation at Astra 23.5°E in June 2011, however, in September 2010, Astra 2C was moved back to Astra 19.2°E.
Late in 2009 SES announced that three more satellites have been ordered for this position. The three craft, Astra 2E, Astra 2F and Astra 2G, are being built by
Astrium
on the Eurostar E3000 platform for
K
u
and
K
a
band
use in Europe and Africa, and will be launched between 2012 and 2014.
[10]
In August 2011
Astra 1N
was launched to the 28.2°E position to provide interim capacity for the UK and Republic of Ireland with a UK spot beam receivable on 45 cm dishes. Astra 1N was originally designed to provide digital television and radio broadcast services across Europe from the Astra 19.2°E position and is expected to be moved to that orbital position when Astra 2E, Astra 2F and Astra 2G come into service.
[11]
All traffic on Astra 2D was transferred to Astra 1N in early 2012. Astra 2D remained
co-located
at 28.2°E, with no transponder activity,
[12]
until it was repositioned to
Astra 5°E
in July 2015.
[13]
On September 28, 2012, Astra 2F was successfully launched from
Kourou
in
French Guiana
.
[14]
The satellite underwent tests at 43.5°E
[15]
and began commercial operations at 28.2°E on November 21, 2012.
[1]
As of June 2013 five transponders are active on Astra 2F's UK beam and two on the West Africa beam.
[16]
This released Astra 2B for its planned relocation to the Astra 19.2°E position in February 2013.
[17]
Astra 2E was launched to the Astra 28.2°E position from
Baikonur
in
Kazakhstan
on September 30, 2013
[18]
following a 10-week delay caused by the catastrophic failure of a previous launch.
[19]
When Astra 2E became operational in February 2014, all channels currently broadcasting from Astra 1N were moved to Astra 2E
[20]
and Astra 1N relocated to its design location of 19.2°E.
[21]
)
[22]
Astra 2G was launched on December 27, 2014.
[23]
The craft was positioned at 21.0°E for three months
[24]
before being moved to 43.5°E for testing.
[25]
It was then moved west to be
co-located
with the Astra 2E and Astra 2F satellites at 28.2°E.
[26]
In March 2015, two years beyond Astra 2A's projected lifespan, and following the launches of
Astra 2E
in 2013,
Astra 2F
in 2012, and
Astra 2G
in 2014 to 28.2°E (Astra 2G initially going to 21.0°E), all remaining traffic was transferred from Astra 2A to the newer satellites.
[27]
As of June 29, 2015, Astra 2A remains at the 28.2°E slot but is inactive and is expected to be moved to
Astra 23.5°E
, to operate as a backup satellite to
Astra 3B
.
[28]
On June 15, 2015, Astra 2G arrived at the Astra 28.2°E slot and on June 18 the first channels transferred
[29]
from Astra 2E, Astra 2F and, in particular from Eutelsat 28A, which was some two years beyond its expected end-of-life and operating with some transponders considerably under power.
[30]
The final Eutelsat 28A channels, including the
Freesat
EPG data channel, transferred to Astra 2G on June 29, 2015.
[31]
See also
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References
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]
- ^
a
b
"SES' ASTRA 2F SATELLITE STARTS OPERATIONS"
(Press release). SES. November 21, 2012
. Retrieved
November 21,
2012
.
- ^
The fleet - EUTELSAT 28A satellite
Eutelsat.com. Accessed July 2, 2015
Archived
July 2, 2015, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
Satellite To Be Moved, Renamed Afghansat 1 under Eutelsat-Afghan Pact
, Space News, January 28, 2014, archived from
the original
on January 30, 2014
, retrieved
February 28,
2014
- ^
SES “28.2° East” (August 2007). Company factsheet
- ^
SES Fleet & Coverage - 28.2°E
Archived
2014-02-13 at the
Wayback Machine
SES website. Accessed October 26, 2016
- ^
28.2°E
www.ses.com. Accessed December 29, 2019
- ^
a
b
"Astra 2A ready for commercial operations at 28.2° east. Astra 1D to be relocated to 19.2° East" (Press release). SES. 15 January 1998.
- ^
"SES To Move ASTRA 2C Satellite To 31.5 Degrees East To Support Development Of New Orbital Position"
(Press release). SES. 10 March 2009
. Retrieved
18 June
2010
.
- ^
"Astra 2C arrived at 31.5 East"
. Lyngemark Satellite. 11 May 2009. Archived from
the original
on 19 May 2009
. Retrieved
21 September
2012
.
- ^
"SES Orders Four New Satellites From ASTRIUM"
(Press release). SES. 30 November 2009
. Retrieved
18 June
2010
.
- ^
"ASTRA 1N ROARS INTO SPACE ON BOARD ARIANE 5"
(Press release). SES. August 7, 2011.
- ^
Astra 2D in SES fleet information
Archived
2014-02-13 at the
Wayback Machine
Accessed July 26, 2013
- ^
"TV satellites"
.
n2yo.com
. Retrieved
July 22,
2015
.
- ^
"SES SUCCESSFULLY LAUNCHES ASTRA 2F SATELLITE"
(Press release). SES. October 1, 2012
. Retrieved
October 1,
2012
.
- ^
Astra 2F Testing Reception Reports
, Satellites.co.uk, archived from
the original
on November 22, 2012
, retrieved
November 23,
2012
- ^
Astra 2F in lyngsat.com
Accessed June 3, 2013
- ^
Our global satellite fleet
SES booklet November 2012 fleet plan for 2015. Accessed February 15, 2013
Archived
August 16, 2012, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"ASTRA 2E successfully launched"
(Press release). SES. September 30, 2013
. Retrieved
September 30,
2013
.
- ^
Russia Halts Proton Rocket Launches After Explosive Crash
Space.com. July 2, 2013. Accessed September 30, 2013
- ^
Alix Pryde.
"BBC Blogs - About the BBC - Changes to BBC satellite transponders in 2013"
.
About the BBC
. Retrieved
July 16,
2013
.
- ^
Real Time Satellite Tracking And Predictions
Accessed February 28, 2014
- ^
"SES's ASTRA 2E SATELLITE GOES LIVE at 28.2/28.5 DEGREES EAST OVER EMEA"
(Press release). SES. January 30, 2014
. Retrieved
February 27,
2014
.
- ^
"Successful Proton Mission Caps busy Year of Russian Space Launches"
.
Spaceflight101: Space News and Beyond
. December 27, 2014. Archived from the original on 2020-03-20
. Retrieved
2020-03-20
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
link
)
- ^
"Track ASTRA 2G at 28.2?E and view detailed satellite position data"
.
satellite-calculations.com
. Retrieved
March 3,
2015
.
- ^
"Astra 2G: Testing at 43.5°E"
.
Satellite & Digital TV Support forums
. 4 May 2015
. Retrieved
May 18,
2015
.
- ^
"Up to date satellite position list 17.10.2015 12:57 UTC Jens T. Satre"
.
satellite-calculations.com
. Retrieved
May 28,
2015
.
- ^
"Astra 2A frequencies moved to Astra 2E and 2F - better UK TV reception for many in Spain - The Sat and PC Guy - Sky TV Spain, Freesat TV Spain, UK TV Spain, UK Satellite TV and Spanish TV Installations for the Costa Blanca, Costa Azahar and Valencia areas of Spain"
.
The Sat and PC Guy - Sky TV Spain, Freesat TV Spain, UK TV Spain, UK Satellite TV and Spanish TV Installations for the Costa Blanca, Costa Azahar and Valencia areas of Spain
. 5 March 2015
. Retrieved
March 25,
2015
.
- ^
Where markets grow via satellite: Our global satellite fleet
SES January 2012
- ^
Sat and PC Guy blog. June 1, 2015. Accessed June 26, 2015
- ^
"RACE AGAINST TIME TO REPLACE FAILING EUROBIRD SATELLITE - Best Tv Choice"
.
Best Tv Choice
. Archived from
the original
on September 23, 2015
. Retrieved
June 26,
2015
.
- ^
"Freesat EPG and last few channels transfer from Eutelsat 28A to new Astra 2 satellites"
.
The Sat and PC Guy - Sky TV Spain, Freesat TV Spain, UK TV Spain, UK Satellite TV and Spanish TV Installations for the Costa Blanca, Costa Azahar and Valencia areas of Spain
. 29 June 2015
. Retrieved
June 29,
2015
.
External links
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