This story was updated on
Feb. 27 at 8:47 a.m. EST.
A Zenit rocket blasted off
from Kazakhstan Thursday and deployed a Canadian communications satellite
designed to bridge three continents with Internet and video services.
The Zenit 3SLB booster
launched at 1830 GMT (1:30 p.m. EST) Thursday from pad 45 at the Baikonur
Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, beginning the second mission of a Sea Launch spinoff
program aimed serving the market for medium-class communications satellites.
Propelled by a four-nozzle
RD-171 engine, the 192-foot-tall launcher darted into the night sky and flew to
an altitude of 52 miles before jettisoning the first stage about two-and-a-half
minutes after liftoff.
The Zenit's second stage
ignited for a six-minute firing, during which the rocket shed its nose cone
after it transited the dense lower layers of the atmosphere.
The Block DM-SLB upper
stage continued the push toward orbit moments after separating from the second
stage. The kerosene-fueled stage first placed the rocket and the Telstar 11N
satellite into a temporary low-altitude parking orbit, then gradually raised
the craft's altitude and lowered its inclination.
The upper stage released
the 8,840-pound satellite a few seconds before 0026 GMT Friday (7:26 p.m. EST
Thursday), completing the Land Launch consortium's second missionsince
beginning services in April 2008.
A ground station in
Australia acquired radio signals from Telstar 11N a few minutes later,
confirming the craft survived the trip to space.
Thursday's flight was the
first Land Launch mission under the auspices of Sea Launch. Last
year's debut launch was managed by Space International Services Ltd., Sea
Launch's Moscow-based partner in charge of mission integration.
The maiden flight was
hampered by an undisclosed technical issue that caused the mission's Israeli
satellite payload to be deployed in an orbit just shy of prelaunch predictions.
No such problems appeared
to occur Thursday, and Sea Launch officials declared the flight a total success
shortly after spacecraft separation.
"This significant
accomplishment represents the work of Space International Services, based in
Moscow, and its collaboration with the Sea Launch partnership," said Kjell
Karlsen, president and general manager of Sea Launch. "Our Land Launch
service responds to our customers' requirements for reliable, single-payload
capabilities in the medium-weight commercial satellite market."
The Zenit was shooting for
a geosynchronous transfer orbit with a high point of 22,236 miles, a low point
of 954 miles and an inclination of 34.6 degrees.
Telstar 11N will use its
own propulsion system to reach a circular geosynchronous orbit with an altitude
of about 22,300 miles. The satellite will be stationed over the equator at 37.5
degrees west longitude, or just off the northeast coast of South America.
The satellite carries 39
Ku-band transponders able to reach customers in North America, Western Europe
and Africa. Telstar 11N also includes an Atlantic Ocean beam to provide mobile
broadband services to ships and airplanes on transoceanic routes.
Space Systems/Loral built
the spacecraft for Ottawa-based Telesat, a partially-owned subsidiary of Loral
Space and Communications Inc. Telesat is a leading operator of 13 satellites
covering six continents. Telstar 11N is based on the Loral 1300 series of communications
satellites.
Telstar 11N is designed to
operate for at least 15 years.
"We thank Sea Launch
and Space International Services, their Land Launch partner, for their
dedication in providing a successful mission and we also thank Space Systems/Loral,"
said Dan Goldberg, Telesat president and CEO.
"This is Telesat's
first time using the Zenit 3SLB vehicle at the Baikonur space center and we are
obviously very pleased with the outcome today," Goldberg said.
Two more Land Launch
missions are on tap for the rest of the year. Sea Launch also plans three
flights from the company's oceangoing Odyssey launch platform.
The Telstar 11N mission
leapfrogged another Land Launch flight with the Malaysian MEASAT 3a
communications satellite. MEASAT 3a was damaged during a crane mishap at
Baikonur last August, and officials decided to ship the satellite back to its
builder in the United States for repair work.
The next Sea Launch flight
is slated to loft the Sicral 1B military communications satellite for Italy.
That launch was delayed from this month due to unspecified technical concerns
with spacecraft.
Copyright 2009 SpaceflightNow.com,
all rights reserved.

