Two communications satellites
destined to serve millions of Americans were delivered to space Friday evening
to begin their television and Internet broadcasting missions.
Liftoff of the Ariane 5 ECA
rocket occurred on-time at 2208 GMT (5:08 p.m. EST) from the ELA-3 launch pad
in Kourou, French Guiana [image].
The 166-foot (55-meter)
tall rocket flew east from South America's northeast coast, dropping its two
solid rocket boosters and first stage in the Atlantic Ocean before finally
releasing the WildBlue 1 and AMC 18 satellites about a half-hour into the
flight.
The Ariane 5 placed the
satellites in the planned elliptical geostationary transfer orbit stretching
from a low point of around 155 miles (249 kilometers) to a high point of more
than 22,300 miles (35,888 kilometers). The targeted inclination was
approximately 2 degrees.
Both payloads will be
maneuvered into a circular geostationary orbit 22,300 miles above the Equator
in the coming weeks. WildBlue 1 will be positioned at 111 degrees West
longitude above the Pacific Ocean, while AMC 18 will operate from 105 degrees
West longitude.
WildBlue 1 is beginning a
15-year mission to provide broadband Internet services to more customers across
the United States. The 10,439-pound satellite will triple the broadband
capacity offered by Colorado-based WildBlue Communications, Inc.
"We've taken a major
step in the WildBlue history toward increasing our subscriber capacity [by]
greater than 500,000 customers [that] we can add onto our network with this
satellite," said Jim Elliot, vice president of infrastructure for
WildBlue.
Built by Space
Systems/Loral, the satellite features a Ka-band communications payload
utilizing 35 geographical spot beams focused on regions throughout the
contiguous United States. The system will provide wireless high speed Internet
to rural homes and offices that are often far removed from terrestrial
networks.
"That will help us
satisfy the tremendous demand that we're having for our service, and that is to
bring high-speed Internet access all over the United States of America,"
Elliot said in a post-launch speech.
WildBlue has been using
Ka-band systems aboard the Canadian Anik F2 satellite, and company officials
say they will continue leasing capacity from the spacecraft in the future.
WildBlue's Internet service
is about 30 times faster than typical dial-up connections, according to the
company's Web site.
SES AMERICOM's AMC 18
broadcasting satellite was also put into orbit Friday. The craft carries 24
C-band transponders that will reach users across the United States, Mexico and the Caribbean during the next 15 years. The 4,588-pound satellite was manufactured by
Lockheed Martin.
Programming offered through
AMC 18 will include a variety of cable television networks, including high definition
channels. AMC 18 joins 18 other active spacecraft in SES AMERICOM's fleet.
"The mission is really
to support the cable companies for cable programming and the high demand for
high definition TV," said Dennis Huyler, spacecraft mission director for SES
AMERICOM.
Friday's launch was the 5th
and final flight for Ariane rocket family this year. Each of the company's
missions in 2006 used the Ariane 5 ECA vehicle and carried multiple payloads.
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