An Ariane 5 rocket blasted
away from its jungle launch pad in South America on Friday night, overcoming a
technical glitch that stopped an initial countdown with just 10 seconds left on
the clock.
The giant booster was
aiming for an on-time launch at 5:28 p.m. EDT (2128 GMT) to haul a pair of
communications satellites into orbit. But the computer-controlled countdown
sequence was halted after a problem was detected at the ELA-3 launch pad.
Engineers scrambled to
resolve the problem and reset the countdown. The quick work paid off and a
fresh seven-minute count commenced at the Guiana Space Center. The remote
launch base is located on the northeastern coast of South America in Kourou,
French Guiana.
The hydrogen-fueled main
engine rumbled to ignition at 6:02 p.m. (EDT 2202 GMT), followed seven seconds
later with
the blinding flash of the twin solid-fuel rocket motors firing to life for
liftoff.
Roaring through a few low
clouds, the launcher pitched eastward for its half-hour flight to reach
geosynchronous transfer orbit with the Intelsat 11 and Optus D2 satellite
payloads stacked aboard.
The solid motors burned out
and fell away two-and-a-half-minutes into the ascent, leaving the cryogenic
main stage to continue propelling the vehicle for another seven minutes. A
storable propellant upper stage then took over to power the two Orbital
Science-built satellites to their intended altitude.
Arianespace reported the
elliptical injection orbit had a high point of 22,316 miles, a low point of 363
miles and inclination of four degrees to the equator.
The Intelsat 11 spacecraft
was deployed first, separating nearly 28 minutes after liftoff. A dual-payload
launch structure was jettisoned soon thereafter, enabling Optus D2 to be
released 32 minutes into the ascent.
It was the 20th consecutive
successful launch for the heavy-duty Ariane 5 rocket fleet.
Intelsat 11 is designed to
relay direct-to-home TV broadcasting and data networking services to Latin
America when it enters service later this year. The craft is equipped with 16
C- and 18 Ku-band transponders.
Controllers will maneuver
the satellite into a circular
geostationary orbit 22,300 miles above Earth where it can match the planet's
rotation and remain parked at 43 degrees West longitude over the equator.
Intelsat says the new
craft, with its 16-year life span, will replace the firm's aging Intelsat 6B
and 3R satellites.
In Friday night's
post-launch jubilations, Kenneth Lee, the Intelsat vice president of space
systems management and planning, thanked Arianespace for the smooth ride given
to the Intelsat 11 spacecraft. Ariane rockets have launched 47 satellites for
Intelsat since 1983.
"This is the reason
that we keep coming back for more," Lee said. "Once again, you have
demonstrated flexibility, while meeting all of the things that we need -
delivering 100 percent."
The Optus D2 satellite will
be used for television and communications services to Australia and New
Zealand. It features two dozen Ku-band transponders and a design life exceeding
15 years.
Just like its launch
partner, the Optus D2 is destined for geostationary orbit. The satellite is
headed for 152 degrees East longitude over the equator to replace the Optus B3
craft launched in 1994.
Orbital Sciences has
developed a growing niche for small geostationary communications satellites.
Friday's liftoff marked the first time that two such spacecraft had been paired
together to launch aboard a single rocket.
"Both Intelsat and
Optus are very important and valued customers of Orbital and we are committed
to extending our history of carrying out successful missions for them,"
said Senior Vice President Christopher Richmond, head of Orbital's GEO
communications satellite programs.
The Ariane 5 rocket has
flown four times this year and Arianespace is planning two more. Next on the
schedule is a liftoff November 9 carrying the British Skynet 5B military
communications satellite and the Brazilian STAR ONE C1 telecommunications
spacecraft.
Arianespace says its
healthy order book for upcoming launches includes:
- 27
satellites to be launched into geostationary transfer orbit, using Ariane
5 and possibly Russian Soyuz boosters for the smaller spacecraft
- 11
governmental launches by Ariane 5, including nine for the European Space
Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicles to the International Space Station
- 10 Soyuz
launches (six from the new pad being built in Kourou and four from
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan)
The next commercial Soyuz
is scheduled for launch from Baikonur on October 21 carrying replacement
satellites for the Globalstar mobile telephone network.
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