A
Zenit rocket blasted off and disappeared into a moonlit sky early Wednesday,
launching a successful one-hour mission to deploy a 10,200-pound cable
television broadcasting satellite to cover North America.
The Galaxy 18 satellite
began its trip to space at 5:43 a.m. EDT (0943 GMT), or around midnight at the
equatorial launch site in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
Propelled off its
ocean-going launch platform by 1.6 million pounds of thrust, the Ukrainian
booster pitched east from the launch pad, dropping its first stage and
U.S.-built payload fairing within the first four minutes of the flight. The
rocket's second stage and Block DM-SL upper stage separated as planned about
eight-and-a-half minutes into the mission.
The Russian upper stage
fired its engine twice, first to enter a temporary parking orbit, then to send
Galaxy 18 on a looping trajectory with a high point 22,144 miles (35,637 km). The
rocket released the satellite about 61 minutes after liftoff.
A ground station in South
Africa received the first signals from the spacecraft a few minutes later,
confirming it was healthy after arriving in orbit.
"On time launch, on
time separation, on time acquisition. It was an outstanding mission," said
Rob Peckham, president and general manager of Sea Launch Co.
Peckham said the rocket put
Galaxy 18 in an accurate orbit with an inclination of zero degrees and altitude
numbers within two miles of pre-launch targets.
"We're obviously
extremely proud of today's mission and the results," Peckham said.
Intelsat Ltd. of Bermuda
will use Galaxy 18's communications payload to reach customers across the
continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Canada, and Mexico.
"I would like to thank
Sea Launch for doing a great job with today's mission," said Thierry
Guillemin, Intelsat chief technical officer.
Sea Launch did not give the
formal go-ahead for the flight until Monday due to an unexplained technical
issue during another
Zenit launch last month. The April Zenit launch delivered an Israeli
communications craft to an orbit just shy of the rocket's objective.
Last month's Zenit flight
was the first mission for Land Launch, a Sea Launch spinoff program aimed at
hauling medium-class satellites into space.
"The (Sea Launch)
Chief Systems Engineer reviewed the response to our inquiry and determined that
we could lift the launch constraint on Galaxy 18," said Paula Korn, Sea
Launch spokesperson.
Korn said she could not
comment further about the issue because the April mission was conducted under
the management of Space International Services Ltd., the Moscow-based firm that
partnered with Sea Launch to form the Land Launch program.
Galaxy 18 will spend the
next few weeks circularizing its orbit at an altitude of about 22,300 miles
(35,888 km). The craft will be stationed along the equator at 123 degrees west
longitude for a mission expected to last more than 15 years.
"Once Galaxy 18
completes its in-orbit testing, it will operate in a powerhouse role in the Intelsat
fleet, delivering some of the most popular programming to millions of American
homes," said David McGlade, Intelsat CEO.
The spacecraft will replace
Galaxy 10R, a satellite that was stricken by problems with its xenon ion
propulsion system in 2004. The eight-year-old craft was originally designed for
a lifetime of 15 years, but the propulsion failure forced its owners to order a
replacement earlier than planned. PanAmSat Corp. signed the Galaxy 18
construction contract with Space Systems/Loral in 2005, a year before PanAmSat
merged with Intelsat.
Equipped with 24 C-band and
24 Ku-band transponders, Galaxy 18 will broadcast cable television programming
for Intelsat's corporate and government customers. Galaxy 18 will also provide
data and other communications services, according to Intelsat.
"ESPN, Viacom and
Showtime are just a few of the premier customers who anchor the 123 degrees
west location," McGlade said. "That is why our North American Galaxy
fleet is unequaled in terms of cable distribution reach and holds an
industry-leading customer base."
"It's a very powerful
and excellent spacecraft for video over North America," Guillemin said.
"It will be going in the cable arc, so major applications are video, in
particular video distribution. But what this is providing for areas like Alaska
is also data (and) voice connectivity. It's everything you can need in terms of
communication."
McGlade said Intelsat plans
to invest up to $500 million in the company's satellite fleet and ground
infrastructure this year, including the launch of the Galaxy 19 satellite on
another Sea Launch mission this fall.
The Sea Launch Commander control
ship and the Odyssey launch platform will sail back to Sea Launch's California
home port to begin preparing for the company's next mission in July.
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