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Two television broadcasting satellites to serve Europe and Japan moved to a South America launch pad Thursday, ready to blast off aboard an Ariane 5 rocket Friday evening.
The 165-foot-tall Ariane rocket rolled 1.7 miles from the final assembly building to the ELA-3 launch pad Thursday, then workers began connecting the vehicle to the facility's electrical and fueling system.
Liftoff is scheduled for 21:53 GMT (5:53 p.m. EDT) Friday on the expendable rocket's fourth flight of the year.
Satellites for European and Japanese operators are stacked inside the launcher's nose cone for the journey to space.
The ASTRA 1N satellite, a broadcasting platform for Europe, will jettison from the rocket first at 27 minutes, 12 seconds after liftoff. The spacecraft weighs 11,794 pounds at launch, including propellant to guide itself to a 22,300-mile-high perch over the equator.
ASTRA 1N will be initially positioned in geosynchronous orbit at 28.2 degrees east longitude to serve the United Kingdom and Ireland. Then the satellite will move to a permanent location at 19.2 degrees east for the bulk of its 15-year service life.
From its second position, ASTRA 1N will provide direct-to-home digital and high-definition television broadcasting to Germany, France and Spain, according to SES ASTRA, the craft's operator based in Luxembourg.
The spacecraft's communications payload features 52 active Ku-band transponders. Its solar panels will stretch more than 130 feet across when fully extended in orbit.
Full article
Live webcast (starts at 21:23 UTC, 5:23 p.m. EDT)
http://www.videocorner.tv/videocorner2/live_flv/index.php?langue=en
Calender event where you can request a reminder (thanks Orb)
http://www.orbiter-forum.com/calendar.php?do=getinfo&e=380&day=2011-7-1&c=1
The Ariane 5 rocket rolled to the launch pad Thursday. Credit: Arianespace
Photo of the ASTRA 1N satellite being attached to the Ariane 5 rocket earlier in June.
The BSAT 3c/JCSAT 110R spacecraft will ride to orbit in the lower position inside the Ariane 5 rocket's payload fairing.
The 165-foot-tall Ariane rocket rolled 1.7 miles from the final assembly building to the ELA-3 launch pad Thursday, then workers began connecting the vehicle to the facility's electrical and fueling system.
Liftoff is scheduled for 21:53 GMT (5:53 p.m. EDT) Friday on the expendable rocket's fourth flight of the year.
Satellites for European and Japanese operators are stacked inside the launcher's nose cone for the journey to space.
The ASTRA 1N satellite, a broadcasting platform for Europe, will jettison from the rocket first at 27 minutes, 12 seconds after liftoff. The spacecraft weighs 11,794 pounds at launch, including propellant to guide itself to a 22,300-mile-high perch over the equator.
ASTRA 1N will be initially positioned in geosynchronous orbit at 28.2 degrees east longitude to serve the United Kingdom and Ireland. Then the satellite will move to a permanent location at 19.2 degrees east for the bulk of its 15-year service life.
From its second position, ASTRA 1N will provide direct-to-home digital and high-definition television broadcasting to Germany, France and Spain, according to SES ASTRA, the craft's operator based in Luxembourg.
The spacecraft's communications payload features 52 active Ku-band transponders. Its solar panels will stretch more than 130 feet across when fully extended in orbit.
Full article
Live webcast (starts at 21:23 UTC, 5:23 p.m. EDT)
http://www.videocorner.tv/videocorner2/live_flv/index.php?langue=en
Calender event where you can request a reminder (thanks Orb)
http://www.orbiter-forum.com/calendar.php?do=getinfo&e=380&day=2011-7-1&c=1
The Ariane 5 rocket rolled to the launch pad Thursday. Credit: Arianespace
Photo of the ASTRA 1N satellite being attached to the Ariane 5 rocket earlier in June.
The BSAT 3c/JCSAT 110R spacecraft will ride to orbit in the lower position inside the Ariane 5 rocket's payload fairing.
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