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ARSAT-1

ARSAT-1
ARSAT-1 En INVAP.jpg
ARSAT-1 in INVAP.
Mission type Communication
Operator AR-SAT
COSPAR ID 2014-062B
SATCAT № 40272
Mission duration 15 years
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft ARSAT-1
Bus ARSAT-3K
Manufacturer INVAP
Thales Alenia Space
Launch mass 2,985 kilograms (6,581 lb)
Start of mission
Launch date 16 October 2014, 21:43 (2014-10-16UTC21:43Z) UTC
Rocket Ariane 5ECA
Launch site Kourou ELA-3
Contractor Arianespace
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Geostationary
Longitude 72° West
Perigee 35,787 kilometres (22,237 mi)
Apogee 35,799 kilometres (22,244 mi)
Inclination 0.02 degrees
Period 1436.13 minutes
Epoch 24 January 2015, 05:32:19 UTC
Transponders
Band 24 IEEE Ku band
Coverage area Southern South America

ARSAT-1 Mission Logo
ARSAT-1 Mission Logo

ARSAT Satellite Fleet
← Nahuel 1A
ARSAT-2 →

ARSAT-1 Mission Logo
ARSAT-1 Mission Logo

ARSAT-1 is a geostationary communications satellite operated by AR-SAT and built by the Argentine company INVAP. ARSAT-1 was launched into orbit on October 16, 2014 from French Guiana alongside Intelsat-30 satellite using an Ariane 5 rocket. It is expected to be located at 72° West longitude geostationary slot. ARSAT-1 is the first geostationary satellite built in Latin America. Total cost of the satellite is 270 millon US dollars.

ARSAT-1 carries a total of 24 IEEE Ku band (NATO J-band) transponders. Twelve will be operating at 36 MHz, eight at 54 MHz and four at 72 MHz, for a total bandwidth of 1152 MHz. It will offer a wide range of telecommunications, data transmission, telephone and television services mainly across all of Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay including direct broadcast TV in the ISDB-S standard.

The ARSAT-1 is the first flight model of the ARSAT-3K satellite bus developed by INVAP for ARSAT S.A.. It is a small (around 3 t (3.3 tons) at launch) platform with a 350 kg (770 lb) maximum payload mass and 3.5 kW of payload power consumption at the satellite end of life. It uses an integrated chemical propulsion system supplied by EADS Astrium for both orbit raising and station keeping.


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