Thaicom 6
Thai satellite
THAICOM 6 Mission logo of THAICOM 6
Mission type Communication Operator Thaicom COSPAR ID 2014-002A SATCAT no. 39500 Mission duration 15 years
Bus GEOStar-2 Manufacturer Orbital Sciences Corporation Launch mass 3,325 kg (7,330 lb) Power 3.7 kW (5.0 hp)[ 2]
Launch date January 6, 2014, 22:06 (2014-01-06UTC22:06Z ) UTC Rocket Falcon 9 v1.1 Launch site Cape Canaveral SLC-40 Contractor SpaceX
Reference system Geocentric Regime Geostationary Longitude 78.5° East Perigee altitude 35,789 kilometres (22,238 mi)[ 3] Apogee altitude 35,795 kilometres (22,242 mi)[ 3] Inclination 0.07 degrees[ 3] Period 1436.07 minutes[ 3] Epoch 25 January 2015, 02:13:56 UTC[ 3]
Band 18 C band 8 Ku band Frequency 72, 36 MHz C band 54, 36 MHz Ku band Coverage area Southeast Asia , Africa & Americas
THAICOM 6 (Thai : ไทยคม 6 ) is a Thai satellite of the Thaicom series, operated by Thaicom Public Company Limited , a subsidiary of INTOUCH headquartered in Bangkok , Thailand . THAICOM 6 is colocated with Thaicom 5 at 78.5 degrees East, in geostationary orbit . The total cost for the satellite is US$160 million .
Overview
THAICOM 6 is a 3-axis stabilized spacecraft , carrying 18 active C-band transponders and 8 active Ku-band transponders. The Ku-band transponders are both addressed as well as beam-switched to broadband. THAICOM 6 provides communication service to Southeast Asia, Africa and Madagascar[ 4] with its primary role being DTH service for Thailand.[ 2] [needs update ]
Launch
THAICOM 6 launching on a Falcon 9 v1.1 vehicle.
The spacecraft was launched on 6 January 2014, by SpaceX on a Falcon 9 v1.1 launch vehicle. The payload was delivered by SpaceX to a 90,000 kilometers (56,000 mi)-apogee supersynchronous elliptical transfer orbit that will later be reduced by the satellite builder Orbital Sciences Corporation to an approximately 35,800 kilometers (22,200 mi) circular geostationary orbit . The supersynchronous transfer orbit enables an inclination plane change with a lower expenditure of propellant by the satellite's kick motor .[ 5] `
This launch was SpaceX's second transport of a payload to a Geostationary transfer orbit .[ 6] [ 7] Both the SES-8 SpaceX launch before this one and THAICOM 6 utilized a supersynchronous transfer orbit, but Thaicom 6 was at a somewhat greater apogee than that used for SES-8.[ 5]
The Falcon 9 upper stage used to launch THAICOM 6 was left in a decaying elliptical low-Earth orbit which decayed over time and, on 28 May 2014, re-entered the atmosphere and burned up.[ 8]
See also
References
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