Brasilsat B1
Mission type | Telecommunications |
---|---|
Operator | Embratel |
COSPAR ID | 1994-049A |
SATCAT no. | 23199 |
Mission duration | 12 years |
Spacecraft properties | |
Bus | HS-376 |
Manufacturer | Hughes |
Launch mass | 1,760 kilograms (3,880 lb) |
Power | 1,650 watts |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | August 10, 1994 (1994-08-10) at 23:05:00 UTC |
Rocket | Ariane 44 LP V66 |
Launch site | Kourou ELA-2 |
Contractor | Arianespace |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Geostationary |
Longitude | (first position): 70° West (current position): 68° West[when?] |
Perigee altitude | 36,044.8 kilometres (22,397.2 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 36,118.9 kilometres (22,443.2 mi) |
Inclination | 5.7 degrees[citation needed] |
Period | 1,450 minutes |
Transponders | |
Frequency | 3625 - 4200 MHz |
Brasilsat B1 is a Brazilian communications satellite launched on August 10, 1994, by an Ariane rocket model 44LP at Guiana Space Centre which is located in Kourou, French Guiana.[1]
History
It was constructed by the United States and Brazil and is classified as a second generation satellite. It is larger and more powerful than the previous generation of satellites.
The Boeing Company (which chose to expand its presence in another aerospace field of satellite communications by purchasing Hughes Electronics Corporation, the builder of Brasilsat B1 and B2) contracted the acquisition of three satellites from Hughes. As part of the contract, Hughes would divide the work with Promon Engenharia SA of São Paulo. Brasilsat B1 and B2 were tested by the Institute of Space Research - INPE of São José dos Campos, Brasilsat B3 and B4 were tested in the Hughes laboratories.
The contract also included renovation of sensor equipment and telemetry, provided by Guaratiba Center for Satellite Signaling, located in Rio de Janeiro, as well as automation and installation of security equipment in the Tanguá Control Station.
Current status
In March 2007, Brasilsat B1 was moved from its former orbital position at 70.0°W to 68.0°W and replaced by Brasilsat B4. On June 2, 2008 Brasilsat B4 was moved from its new position to 84.0°W and replaced at 70.0°W by Star One C2. Brasilsat B3 is currently at 75.0°W.
Of the four Brasilsat satellites, only B3 is still transmitting signals as of July 2021. B4 was retired in June 2021.[2]
Main characteristics
- Original orbital position: 70.0° W
- Current orbital position: 68.0°W (Inactive)
- Coverage: Brazil
- Transponders: 28 C-band
- Downlink frequencies: 5850–6425 MHz
- Uplink frequency: 3625 – 4200 MHz
- Launch date: August 10, 1994
- Model: Hughes HS 376 W
- Launch location/vehicle: Arianespace / Ariane 44 LP
- Planned life of satellite: 12 years
References
- ^ "Successful launch of Euro space rocket". upi.com. August 11, 1994. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
- ^ McDowell, Jonathan [@planet4589] (July 7, 2021). "The Star One B4 satellite, originally called Brasilsat B4, was launched in 2000 to 92 deg W. It appears to have been moved up to the 'GEO graveyard' and retired on Jun 15" (Tweet). Retrieved 7 July 2021 – via Twitter.
External links
- Satellite Brasilsat 1
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- Soyuz TM-18
- Gals 1
- Eutelsat II F5, Türksat 1A
- Meteor-3 #7, Tubsat-B
- Clementine, ISA
- Progress M-21
- Koronas-I
- STS-62
- USA-100, SEDS-2
- USA-101, USA-102
- Kosmos 2274
- Progress M-22
- USA-103
- SROSS-C2
- MSTI-2
- STEP-2
- Rimsat 2
- Progress M-23
- Tselina-D
- Kosmos 2281
- Foton #9
- Intelsat 702, STRV 1A, STRV 1B
- USA-104
- STEP-1
- Soyuz TM-19
- FSW-16
- Kosmos 2282
- STS-65
- PAS-2, Yuri 3n
- Nadezhda #104
- Kosmos 2283
- Apstar 1
- Kosmos 2284
- Kosmos 2285
- APEX
- DirecTV-2
- Kosmos 2286
- Brasilsat B1, Türksat 1B
- Kosmos 2287, Kosmos 2288, Kosmos 2289
- Molniya 3-60
- Progress M-24
- Kosmos 2290
- USA-105
- Optus B3
- Kiku 6
- USA-106
- Telstar 402
- STS-64 (SPARTAN-201)
- Kosmos 2291
- Kosmos 2292
- STS-68
- Soyuz TM-20
- Intelsat 703
- Solidarad 2
- Thaicom 2
- Okean-O1 #7
- Ekspress-2
- IRS-P2
- Elektro #1L
- Astra 1D
- Wind
- Kosmos 2293
- STS-66 (CRISTA-SPAS)
- Resurs-O1 #3L
- Progress M-25
- Kosmos 2294, Kosmos 2295, Kosmos 2296
- Kosmos 2297
- Geo-IK #24
- Orion 1
- Chinasat-6
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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