ILS has rescheduled the Proton launch of the AMC-23 Satellite to 2:28 GMT, December 29, 2005, from Launch Pad 39 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan.
The Proton launch vehicle will inject the satellite into geosynchronous transfer orbit, using a five-burn Breeze M mission design. The first three stages of the Proton will use a standard ascent trajectory to place the Breeze M fourth stage, with the satellite, into a suborbital trajectory, from which the Breeze M will place itself and the spacecraft into a support or reference orbit of 173 km, inclined at 51.5 degrees. Then the satellite will be propelled to its transfer orbit by additional burns of the Breeze M. Following separation from the Breeze M, the spacecraft will perform a series of liquid apogee engine burns to raise perigee, lower inclination and circularise the orbit at the geostationary altitude of 36,000 km.
Target Orbit at Separation: Apogee: 35,786 km Perigee: 6,400 km Inclination: 18.3 degrees
The launch of a Russian Proton carrier with an American communication satellite aboard from Baikonur has been postponed for a day.
"The launch was postponed due to the revealed problems in the systems of the Russian Briz-M booster, manufactured by the Khrunichev center" - Vyacheslav Davidenko, Federal Space Agency spokesman.
The launch was initially scheduled for 5.28 a.m. (02:28 GMT) December 6.
The Proton M/Breeze M launch vehicle will lift-off from Launch Pad 39, Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan at 2:28 GMT, December 6, 2005.
The launch vehicle will inject the satellite into geosynchronous transfer orbit, using a five-burn Breeze M mission design. The first three stages of the Proton will use a standard ascent trajectory to place the Breeze M fourth stage, with the satellite, into a suborbital trajectory, from which the Breeze M will place itself and the spacecraft into a support or reference orbit of 173 km, inclined at 51.5 degrees. Then the satellite will be propelled to its transfer orbit by additional burns of the Breeze M. Following separation from the Breeze M, the spacecraft will perform a series of liquid apogee engine burns to raise perigee, lower inclination and circularise the orbit at the geostationary altitude of 36,000 km, with an orbital location of 172 degrees East longitude.
Target Orbit at Separation: Apogee: 35,786 km Perigee: 6,400 km Inclination: 18.3
The fuelling preparations of the Russian Proton-M carrier rocket that will launch a U.S. AMC-23 (Worldsat-3) communications satellite into orbit have begun.
Once fuelled, it will then be moved to the launch site. The Proton-M carrier rocket with a Briz-M booster and the U.S. satellite is scheduled to be launched from pad No. 200.
The AMC-23/WorldSat-3 was manufactured by French company AAS and is owned by U.S. SES AMERICOM, a provider of satellite communications. The satellite has a flight weight of 5.027 kilograms (11 pounds) and a service life of 16 years.
The Russian Khrunichev Space Centre manufactures the Proton-M carrier rocket and Briz-M booster.
Launch services are provided under contract by joint venture International Launch Services (ILS), which includes Lockheed Martin and Khrunichev.
Twenty four months after the signature of the contract, Alcatel Alenia Space - the prime contractor - announced that the AMC-23 communications satellite is ready to be integrated on the Proton/Breeze M rocket in Baikonur, Kazakhstan. Dedicated to the U.S. operator SES AMERICOM, an SES GLOBAL company, AMC-23 is scheduled for launch on December 6, 2005 by International Launch Services on a Proton Breeze M.
This advanced, high-powered hybrid C/Ku-band satellite will operate over the Pacific region. From this single satellite, communications will be sent from California to Bangladesh and from Alaska to Australia and New Zealand. This hybrid satellite, positioned at 172 degrees East Longitude, will serve local, transcontinental and transoceanic customers across the Pacific region, including Western North America, Eastern Asia, the South Pacific, Alaska and Hawaii and provide links to the world's premier regional satellite systems.
The satellite's Ku-band payload composed of 20 high-powered transponders with bandwidths ranging from 27 to 36 MHz, has been designed to meet the particular requirements of AMERICOM's customer, Connexion by Boeing, for the delivery of high-speed broadband services to commercial airline passengers throughout the Pacific region. In addition, the 18 transponder C-band payloads will be available to broadcasters, cable programmers, Internet service providers, government agencies, educational institutions, carriers and private networks for next generation distribution solutions and connectivity to North America and Pacific Rim.
" We are proud to strengthen the mutual trust between Alcatel Alenia Space and SES AMERICOM. With this 4th Spacebus satellite, which will soon be part of AMERICOM's fleet, we have again expanded our range of technological expertise to meet the needs of new satellite-based services like high-speed Internet, data and entertainment connectivity to aircraft in flight" - Pascale Sourisse, Alcatel Alenia Space President and CEO.
With a launch mass of approximately 5 metric tons, a power of 13 kW, AMC-23 is the fourth Spacebus 4000* telecommunication satellite to be launched this year and will be the fourth Spacebus satellite delivered to SES AMERICOM** in seven years.
A Russian Proton-M carrier rocket carrying an American AMC-23 satellite/WorldSat-3 telecommunication satellite for the Pacific region will lift off from the Baikonur space centre in Kazakhstan on December 6, 5:28 a.m. local time (2:28 GMT).
The satellite was made by France's Alcatel Alenia Space and is owned by an American satellite communication provider, SES AMERICOM. Launch services are provided under contract with the joint venture International Launch Services (ILS), which includes U.S. aeronautics giant Lockheed Martin and Russia's Khrunichev Space Centre.