An
Ariane 5 rocket punched through clear South American skies today to successfully
launch a French military spacecraft and six microsatellites into
orbit.
The
spacecraft, a Helios-2A reconnaissance satellite, and its secondary payloads
lifted off exactly at 11:26 a.m. (1626 GMT) from launch complex ELA3 at Guiana
Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana.
The
launch, Flight 165, marked the first daytime space shot for the French-led
Arianespace consortium in five years.
"This
Flight 165 is special in that we don't have a launch window," said Arianespace
CEO Jean-Yves Le Gall before the flight. "We have to launch exactly on the
second."
Today's on-time launch of Flight
caps the third and last Ariane 5 launch for this year and the 164th launch for
Arianespace.
About one hour into the flight at
12:27 p.m. EST (1727 GMT), the Helios 2A spacecraft successfully separated from
its upper stage, prompting thumbs-up signs from observers in the mission
control. The event was followed by the release of all six microsatellites within
10 minutes.
Speaking from Paris, French Defense
Minister Michele
Alliot-Marie called the
flight an important moment for European defense.
Built by EADS-Astrium for
the French Space Agency (CNES), Helios 2A is a surveillance satellite bound
for a Sun-synchronous polar orbit at an altitude of about 680 kilometers. There
it will serve the defense ministry as well as well as the surveillance
and security needs of a number of European countries, according to its mission profile.
The three-axis stabilized spacecraft weighs about 9,240 pounds (4,200
kilograms).
Flight
165's six auxiliary payloads, CNES' Parasol satellite, the Spanish Nanosat and a
set of four Essaim spacecraft, are part of the Myriad microsatellite
series.
Parasol
is designed to study the radiation and microphysical properties of clouds and
aerosols for CNES. The 20-kilogram Nanosat is a demonstration spacecraft to test
solar and magnetic sensors, as well as telecommunications
systems.
The
remaining four spacecraft, dubbed Essaim 1 through 4, make up a multi-satellite
demonstration mission to test the feasibility of space-based detection of
electronic transmitters. Unlike Parasol and Nanosat, the four Essaim satellites
will fly in formation during their mission, mission officials
said.
"We all
feel a little like orphans," said Bernard Lamaison, Helios 2A spacecraft manager
for CNES, before the launch. "Our satellite's leaving us."
French
space officials don't plan to leave Helios 2A in space alone for long. In 2006,
Helios 2B is due to be completed and delivered Kourou for launch in 2008,
Arianespace officials said.