List of Intelsat satellites
This is a list of satellites operated by Intelsat, Ltd..
Intelsat brand
Generations 1-4 (1965–1978)
Satellite | Launch (UTC)[1] | Rocket | Launch Site | Longitude[2] | Fate | Out of Service | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intelsat I F-1 | 1965-04-06 23:47:50 | Delta D | Canaveral LC-17A | 28°W | Retired | 1965-08 | First commercial geosynchronous satellite |
Intelsat I F-2 | Not launched | ||||||
Intelsat II F-1 | 1966-10-26 23:05:00 | Delta E1 | Canaveral LC-17B | N/A | Retired | N/A | Apogee motor failed, satellite operated from transfer orbit |
Intelsat II F-2 | 1967-01-11 10:55:00 | Delta E1 | Canaveral LC-17B | Retired | 1969 | ||
Intelsat II F-3 | 1967-03-23 01:30:12 | Delta E1 | Canaveral LC-17B | Retired | 1973 | ||
Intelsat II F-4 | 1967-09-28 00:45:00 | Delta E1 | Canaveral LC-17B | Retired | 1971-03 | ||
Intelsat III F-1 | 1968-09-19 00:09:00 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | N/A | Failed | N/A | Delta control failure. Vehicle began breaking up at T+102 seconds followed by RSO destruct T+108 seconds. |
Intelsat III F-2 | 1968-12-19 00:32:00 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | Failed | Operated for one and a half years | ||
Intelsat III F-3 | 1969-02-06 00:39:00 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | Retired | 1979-04 | Operated for seven years | |
Intelsat III F-4 | 1969-06-22 02:00:00 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | Failed | Operated for three years | ||
Intelsat III F-5 | 1969-07-26 02:06:00 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | N/A | Failed | N/A | Launch failure, third stage malfunction |
Intelsat III F-6 | 1970-01-15 00:16:03 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | N/A | Failed | N/A | Operated for two years |
Intelsat III F-7 | 1970-04-23 00:46:12 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | Retired | Operated for sixteen years | ||
Intelsat III F-8 | 1970-07-23 23:23:00 | Delta M | Canaveral LC-17A | N/A | Failed | N/A | Apogee motor failed |
Intelsat IV F-1 | 1975-05-21 22:04:00 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1A | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat IV F-2 | 1971-01-26 00:36:03 | Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat IV F-3 | 1971-12-20 01:10:04 | Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat IV F-4 | 1972-01-23 00:12:04 | Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat IV F-5 | 1972-06-13 21:53:04 | Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat IV F-6 | 1975-02-20 23:35:00 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1A | Canaveral LC-36A | N/A | Failed | N/A | Launch failure. Improper separation of a lanyard during booster jettison caused the Atlas's guidance computer to reset itself. Control of the booster was gradually lost. RSO T+403 seconds. |
Intelsat IV F-7 | 1973-08-23 22:57:02 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1A | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat IV F-8 | 1974-11-21 23:43:59 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1A | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat IVA F-1 | 1975-09-26 00:17:00 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat IVA F-2 | 1976-01-29 23:56 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat IVA F-3 | 1978-01-07 00:15:00 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat IVA F-4 | 1977-05-26 21:47:01 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat IVA F-5 | 1977-09-30 01:02:59 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36A | N/A | Failed | N/A | Launch failure. Gas generator leak caused a fire in the Atlas's engine compartment leading to loss of control starting at T+30 seconds. Payload fairing and satellite were stripped away, followed by vehicle breakup at T+55 seconds. The Centaur was ejected from the exploding booster intact and the destruct command was sent to it a few seconds later. |
Intelsat IVA F-6 | 1978-03-31 23:36:01 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired |
Generations 5-6 (1980–1991)
Satellite | Launch (UTC)[1] | Rocket | Launch Site | Longitude[2] | Fate | Out of Service | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intelsat V F-1 | 1981-05-23 22:42 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-2 | 1980-12-06 23:31 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-3 | 1981-12-15 23:35 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-4 | 1982-03-05 00:23 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-5 | 1982-09-28 23:17 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-6 | 1983-05-19 22:26 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36A | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-7 | 1983-10-19 00:45:36 | Ariane 1 | Kourou ELA-1 | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-8 | 1984-03-05 00:50:03 | Ariane 1 | Kourou ELA-1 | Retired | |||
Intelsat V F-9 | 1984-06-09 23:03 | Atlas G Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | N/A | Failed | N/A | Launch failure. Centaur broke up in orbit, making it impossible for the satellite to attain its intended altitude. |
Intelsat VA F-10 | 1985-03-22 23:55 | Atlas G Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat VA F-11 | 1985-06-30 00:44 | Atlas G Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat VA F-12 | 1985-09-28 23:17 | Atlas G Centaur-D1AR | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat VA F-13 | 1988-05-17 23:58:00 | Ariane 2 | Kourou ELA-1 | | To New Skies as NSS-513 | ||
Intelsat VA F-14 | 1986-05-31 00:53:03 | Ariane 2 | Kourou ELA-1 | N/A | Failed | N/A | Launch failure, third stage failed to ignite |
Intelsat VA F-15 | 1989-01-27 01:21:00 | Ariane 2 | Kourou ELA-1 | | To Columbia Communications Corporation as Columbia 515 | ||
Intelsat 601 | 1991-10-29 23:08:08 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | | 2007-10 | to Europe*Star, decommissioned in 2011[3] | |
Intelsat 602 | 1989-10-17 23:05:00 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | Active | |||
Intelsat 603 | 1990-03-14 11:52 | Commercial Titan III | Canaveral LC-40 | Retired | 2013-01 | Launch failure. Titan second stage failed to separate from the Centaur, leaving the Intelsat in LEO. Reboosted by Space Shuttle Endeavour on STS-49 | |
Intelsat 604 | 1990-06-23 11:19 | Commercial Titan III | Canaveral LC-40 | Retired | 2006-04-06[4] | ||
Intelsat 605 | 1991-08-14 23:15:13 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | 2009-01[5] |
Generations 7-10 (1993–2004)
Satellite | Launch (UTC)[1] | Rocket | Launch Site | Longitude[2] | Fate | Out of Service | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intelsat 701 | 1993-10-22 06:46:00 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | 29.5°W | Inclined orbit | ||
Intelsat 702 | 1994-06-17 07:07:19 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | 32.9°E | Inclined orbit | ||
Intelsat 703 | 1994-10-06 06:35:02 | Atlas IIAS | Canaveral LC-36B | | To New Skies as NSS-703 | ||
Intelsat 704 | 1995-01-10 06:18 | Atlas IIAS | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | |||
Intelsat 705 | 1995-03-22 06:18 | Atlas IIAS | Canaveral LC-36B | Retired | 2011-02-01 | ||
Intelsat 706 | 1995-05-17 06:34:00 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | |||
Intelsat 707 | 1996-03-14 07:11:01 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | |||
Intelsat 708 | 1996-02-14 19:01 | Long March 3B | Xichang LA-2 | N/A | Failed | N/A | Launch failure, carrier rocket went out of control two seconds after launch |
Intelsat 709 | 1996-06-15 06:55:09 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | |||
Intelsat 801 | 1997-03-01 01:07:42 | Ariane 44P | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | |||
Intelsat 802 | 1997-06-25 23:44:00 | Ariane 44P | Kourou ELA-2 | 33°E | Retired | ||
Intelsat 803 | 1997-09-23 23:58 | Ariane 42L | Kourou ELA-2 | | To New Skies as NSS-803, later NSS-5 | ||
Intelsat 804 | 1997-12-22 00:16 | Ariane 42L | Kourou ELA-2 | Failed | 2005-01-15 | ||
Intelsat 805 | 1998-06-18 22:48 | Atlas IIAS | Canaveral SLC-36A | 169°E | Active | Will be replaced by Horizons-3e in late 2018[6] | |
Intelsat 806 | 1998-02-28 00:21 | Atlas IIAS | Canaveral SLC-36B | | To New Skies as NSS-806 | ||
Intelsat 901 | 2001-06-09 06:46 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 18°W | Active | Will be replaced by Intelsat 37e in 2018 | |
Intelsat 902 | 2001-08-30 06:46 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 62°E | Active | Will be replaced by Intelsat 39 in 2018[7] | |
Intelsat 903 | 2002-03-30 17:25:00 | Proton-K / DM3 | Baikonur Site 81/23 | 34.5°W | Active | Will be replaced by Intelsat 35e in 2017[8] | |
Intelsat 904 | 2002-02-23 06:59 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 60°E | Active | Will be replaced by Intelsat 33e in 2016[9] | |
Intelsat 905 | 2002-06-05 06:44 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 24.5°W | Active | ||
Intelsat 906 | 2002-09-06 06:44 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 64.15°E | Active | ||
Intelsat 907 | 2003-02-15 07:00 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 27.5°W | Active | ||
Intelsat 10-01 | Not launched | ||||||
Intelsat 10-02 | 2004-06-16 22:27:00 | Proton-M / Briz-M | Baikonur Site 200/39 | 1°W | Active |
Rebranded PanAmSat constellation (1994–2007)
Satellite | Launch (UTC)[1] | Rocket | Launch Site | Longitude[2] | Fate | Out of Service | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intelsat 1R | 2000-11-16 01:07:07 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | 45°W (2000–2010) 50°W (since 2010) | Retired | ex PAS-1R of PanAmSat. Replaced by Intelsat 14 at 45°W in 2010 and moved to 50°W, where it was finally replaced by Intelsat 29e in 2016 | |
Intelsat 2 | 1994-07-08 23:05:32 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | ex PAS-2 of PanAmSat | ||
Intelsat 3R | 1996-01-12 23:10:00 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | ex PAS-3R of PanAmSat | ||
Intelsat 4 | 1996-08-03 22:58:00 | Ariane 42L | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | ex PAS-4 of PanAmSat | ||
Intelsat 5 | 1997-08-28 00:33:30 | Proton-K / DM3 | Baikonur Site 81/23 | 157°E | | ex PAS-5 of PanAmSat, leased to Arabsat as Arabsat 2C and Badr-C. Battery degradation reduced capacity by over 50%. | |
Intelsat 6B | 1998-12-22 01:08 | Ariane 42L | Kourou ELA-2 | Retired | ex PAS-6 of PanAmSat, XIPS failed in 2003 | ||
Intelsat 7 | 1998-09-16 06:31 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | Active | ex PAS-7 of PanAmSat, power system anomaly | ||
Intelsat 8 | 1998-11-04 05:12:00 | Proton-K / DM3 | Baikonur Site 81/23 | 169°E | Active | ex PAS-8 of PanAmSat | |
Intelsat 9 | 2000-07-28 22:42:00 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 43.1°W | Inclined orbit | ex PAS-9 of PanAmSat | |
Intelsat 10 | 2001-05-15 01:11:30 | Proton-K / DM3 | Baikonur Site 81/23 | 47.5°E | Inclined orbit | ex PAS-10 of PanAmSat | |
Intelsat 11 | 2007-10-05 22:02 | Ariane 5 GS | Kourou ELA-3 | 43°W | Active | ex PAS-11 of PanAmSat | |
Intelsat 12 | 2000-10-29 05:59 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | 45°E | Active | ex Europe*Star 1 or Loral Skynet, PAS-12 of PanAmSat |
Recent spacecraft (since 2009)
Satellite | Launch (UTC)[1] | Rocket | Launch Site | Longitude[2] | Fate | Out of Service | Remarks | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intelsat 14 | 2009-11-23 | Atlas V 431 | Canaveral SLC-41 | 45°W | Active | Replaced Intelsat 1R | ||||||||
Intelsat 15 | 2009-11-30 | Zenit-3SLB | Baikonur Site 45/1 | 85.15°E | Active | Shared with JSAT as JCSAT-85[10] | ||||||||
Intelsat 16 | 2010-02-12 | Proton-M / Briz-M | Baikonur Site 200/39 | 58.1°W | Active | Launched, ex PAS-11R of PanAmSat | ||||||||
Intelsat 17 | 2010-11-26 | Ariane 5 ECA V-198 (556) | Kourou ELA-3 | 66°E | Active | |||||||||
Intelsat 18 | 2011-10-05 | Zenit-3SLB | Baikonur | 180°E | Active | |||||||||
Intelsat 19 | 2012-06-01 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 166°E | Active | Second solar panel failed to deploy | ||||||||
Intelsat 20 | 2012-08-02 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-208 (564) | Kourou ELA-3 | 68.5°E | Active | |||||||||
Intelsat 21 | 2012-08-19 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 58°W | Active | |||||||||
Intelsat 22 | 2012-03-25 | Proton-M / Briz-M | Baikonur | 72.1°E | Active | |||||||||
Intelsat 23 | 2012-10-14 | Proton-M / Briz-M | Baikonur | 53°W | Active | |||||||||
Intelsat 24 | 1996-05-16 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 31°E | Retired | ex Amos-1 of Spacecom, acquired in 2009[11] | ||||||||
Intelsat 25 | 2008-07-07 | Ariane 5 ECA V-184 (541) | Kourou ELA-3 | 31.5°W | Active | ex ProtoStar 1 of ProtoStar, acquired in October 2009[12] | ||||||||
Intelsat 26 | 1997-02-12 | Atlas IIA | Canaveral LC-36B | 62.6°E | Inclined orbit | ex JCSat-R of SKY Perfect JSAT Group, acquired in 2009, leased to Turksat[13] | ||||||||
Intelsat 27 | 2013-02-01 06:56 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 55°W (planned) | Failed | N/A | Launch failure | |||||||
Intelsat 28 (New Dawn) | 2011-04-22 21:37 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-201 (558) | Kourou | 32.8°E | Active | ex New Dawn[14] | ||||||||
Intelsat 29e | 2016-01-27 23:20 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-228 (583) | Kourou | 50°W | Active | First in EpicNG series over twice the weight of preceding generation, featuring multi beam and all digital design with 3-5 times the capacity and 10 times the throughput.[15] Replaced Intelsat 1R. | ||||||||
Intelsat 30 (DLA-1) | 2014-10-16 21:43 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-220 (574) | Kourou | 95°W[16] | Active | Operated by Intelsat for DirecTV Latin America (DLA)[17] | ||||||||
Intelsat 31 (DLA-2) | 2016-06-09 21:43 | Proton-M / Briz-M | Baikonur | 132°W[18] | Active | Operated by Intelsat for DirecTV Latin America (DLA)[17] | ||||||||
Intelsat 32e (SKY-B1) | 2017-02-14 21:59 | Ariane 5 ECA | Kourou | 43°W[19] | Active | Operated by Intelsat for SKY Brasil. Part of EpicNG series.[19] | ||||||||
Intelsat 33e | 2016-08-24 22:16 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-232 (586) | Kourou | 60°E | Active | Second EpicNG.[20] Will replace Intelsat 904[9] | ||||||||
Intelsat 34 | 2015-08-20 20:34 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-225 (579) | Kourou | 55.5°W | Active | [21] | ||||||||
Intelsat 35e | 2017-07-05 23:38 | Falcon 9 Full Thrust[22] | Kennedy | 34.5°W[23] | Launched; moving to destination orbit | Third EpicNG launched, will replace Intelsat 903[8] | ||||||||
Intelsat 36 | 2016-08-24 22:16 | Ariane 5 ECA VA-232 (586) | Kourou | 68.5°E | Active | [20] | ||||||||
Intelsat 37e | 2017-08-31[24] | Ariane 5 ECA | Kourou | 18°W[25] | Scheduled | Will replace Intelsat 901 | ||||||||
Intelsat 38 (Azerspace 2) | H1, 2018 (TBD) | Ariane 5 ECA | Kourou | 45°E[26] | Planned | Operated by Intelsat for Azercosmos.[26] | ||||||||
Intelsat 39 | H2, 2018 (TBD) | Ariane 5 ECA[7] | Kourou | 62°E[27] | Planned | Will replace Intelsat 902[7][27] |
Other brands
Satellite | Launch (UTC)[1] | Rocket | Launch Site | Longitude[2] | Fate | Out of Service | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Galaxy 3C | 2002-06-15 22:39:30 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 95.05°W | Active | ex PAS-9, Galaxy 13 of PanAmSat | |
Galaxy 4R | 2000-04-19 00:29 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 76.85°W | Failed | April 2009 | XIPS malfunction[28] |
Galaxy 5 | 1992-05-14 17:32:41 | Atlas V | Cape Canaveral | 125°W | Retired | January 2005[29] | |
Galaxy 9 | 1996-05-24 01:09:59 | Delta II 7925 | Cape Canaveral LC-17B | 81°W | Retired | June 2010[30] | |
Galaxy 10R | 2000-01-25 01:04 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 123°W | Failed | June 2008 | XIPS malfunction[31] |
Galaxy 11 | 1999-12-22 00:50 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 55.6°W | Active | Reduced power due to solar reflector fogging | |
Galaxy 12 | 2003-04-09 22:52:19 | Ariane 5 G | Kourou ELA-3 | 129°W | Active | ||
Galaxy 13 | See Horizons-1[32] | ||||||
Galaxy 14 | 2005-08-13 23:28:26 | Soyuz-FG/Fregat | Baikonur Site 31/6 | 125°W | Active | ex Galaxy 5R | |
Galaxy 15 | 2005-10-13 22:32 | Ariane 5 GS | Kourou ELA-3 | 133°W | Active | ex Galaxy 1RR; Transmits WAAS Suffered uncontrolled drift in 2010[33] | |
Galaxy 16 | 2006-06-18 07:50 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 99°W | Active | ||
Galaxy 17 | 2007-05-04 22:29 | Ariane 5 ECA | Kourou ELA-3 | 91°W | Active | ||
Galaxy 18 | 2008-05-21 09:43 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 133°W | Active | ||
Galaxy 19 | 2008-09-24 09:28 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 97°W | Active | ex Intelsat Americas 9 | |
Galaxy 23 | 2003-08-08 03:30:55 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 121°W | Active | Part of EchoStar IX spacecraft. ex Telstar 13 of Space Systems Loral, Intelsat Americas 13 | |
Galaxy 25 | 1997-05-24 17:00:00 | Proton-K/DM4 | Baikonur Site 81/23 | 93.1°W | Active | ex Telstar 5 of Space Systems Loral, Intelsat Americas 5 | |
Galaxy 26 | 1999-02-15 05:12:00 | Proton-K/DM3 | Baikonur Site 81/23 | 50°E | Retired[34] | 7 June 2014[35] | ex Telstar 6 of Space Systems Loral, Intelsat Americas 6 |
Galaxy 27 | 1999-09-25 06:29 | Ariane 44LP | Kourou ELA-2 | 66°E | Retired[36] | ex Telstar 7 of Space Systems Loral, Intelsat Americas 7 | |
Galaxy 28 | 2005-06-23 14:03:00 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 89°W | Active | ex Telstar 8 of Space Systems Loral, Intelsat Americas 8 | |
Horizons (since 2003)Horizons satellites are operated by Horizons Satellite, a joint subsidiary of Intelsat and SKY Perfect JSAT Group | |||||||
Horizons-1 | 2003-10-01 04:02:59 | Zenit-3SL | Ocean Odyssey | 127°W | Active | Also designated Galaxy 13[32] | |
Horizons-2 | 2007-12-21 21:41:55 | Ariane 5 GS | Kourou ELA-3 | 84.85°E | Active | ||
Horizons-3e | Late 2018 (TBD)[37] | Ariane 5 ECA[37] | Kourou ELA-3 | 169°E | Planned | Part of the EpicNG family. Will cover the Asia/Pacific region[38][39] and replace Intelsat 805.[6] | |
Intelsat APR (1998–1999)Intelsat APR designations are given to leased capacity on satellites which are not owned by Intelsat | |||||||
Intelsat APR-1 | 1998-07-18 09:20 | Long March 3B | Xichang LA-2 | 146°E | Retired[40] | Leased capacity on Sinosat-1 | |
Intelsat APR-2 | 1999-04-02 22:03 | Ariane 42P | Kourou ELA-2 | 83°E | Retired[41] | Leased capacity on INSAT-2E | |
Intelsat APR-3 | See Intelsat K-TV | ||||||
Intelsat K | 1992-06-10 00:00 | Atlas IIA | Canaveral LC-36B | 21.5°W | Retired | August 2002[42] | ex Satcom K4 of GE Americom, transferred to spin-off New Skies as NSS-K |
Intelsat K-TV | Not launched, to New Skies as NSS-K-TV, NSS-6, to Sinosat as Sinosat-1B with transponders for lease back to Intelsat as APR-3, to HellasSat as HellasSat 2 before launch in 2003 | ||||||
Marisat-F2 | 1976-10-14 | Delta 2914 | Canaveral LC-17A | 176°E (1976–1991) 178°W (1991–1996) 33.9°W (1999–2008) | Retired | October 2008[43] | Ex COMSAT, acquired from Lockheed Martin |
SBS-6 | 1990-10-12 22:58:18 | Ariane 44L | Kourou ELA-2 | 80.9°W | Retired | February 2009[44] | ex Satellite Business Systems |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log". Jonathan's Space Page. Retrieved 2016-08-25.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Intelsat Satellite Fleet". Intelsat. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Intelsat 601". The Satellite Encyclopedia. tbs Internet. 3 July 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- ↑ "Intelsat 604". The Satellite Encyclopedia. tbs Internet. 3 July 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- ↑ "Intelsat 605". The Satellite Encyclopedia. tbs Internet. 3 July 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- 1 2 Krebs, Gunter (2016-04-21). "Horizons 3e". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
- 1 2 3 "Arianespace to launch Intelsat 39" (Press release). Arianespace. 4 January 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- 1 2 Krebs, Gunter. "Intelsat 35e". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- 1 2 Clark, Stephen (August 24, 2016). "Intelsat celebrates double success with Ariane 5 launch". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
- ↑ Krebs, Gunter Dirk (2016-04-21). "Intelsat 15 (JCSat 85)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
- ↑ Krebs, Gunter. "Amos-1 -> Intelsat 24". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
- ↑ Krebs, Gunter. "ProtoStar 1 -> Intelsat 25". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
- ↑ Krebs, Gunter. "JCSat 3, 4 (JCSat R) -> Intelsat 26". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
- ↑ Ariane abort produces fire and smoke, but no blastoff, Spaceflight Now, 30 March 2011, accessed 2011-04-01.
- ↑ "Introducing Intelsat EpicNG Next-Generation, Global High-Performance Satellite Platform" (PDF). Intelstat.com. Retrieved 2017-08-10.
- ↑ "Satbeams - World Of Satellites at your fingertips". Satbeams Web and Mobile.
- 1 2 Krebs, Gunter. "Intelsat 30, 31 / DLA 1, 2". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- ↑ "Satbeams - World Of Satellites at your fingertips". Satbeams Web and Mobile.
- 1 2 Krebs, Gunter. "Intelsat 32e (SKY-Brasil 1)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 14 February 2017.
- 1 2 Bergin, Chris (August 24, 2016). "Ariane 5 sets new record via the lofting of Intelsat pair". NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 2016-08-24.
- ↑ Loguidice, Michele (20 August 2015). "Intelsat Announces Successful Launch of Intelsat 34" (Press release). Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ Clark, Stephen (30 August 2016). "SES agrees to launch satellite on ‘flight-proven’ Falcon 9 rocket". Spaceflight Now.
Intelsat, one of the world’s largest geostationary satellite operators alongside SES, has one launch reserved on a newly-built Falcon 9 rocket in the first quarter of 2017, when the Intelsat 35e satellite will launch from Cape Canaveral.
- ↑ "Upcoming Satellite Launches - Intelsat". 3 June 2015.
- ↑ Clark, Stephen (9 June 2017). "Launch schedule". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved 10 June 2017.
- ↑ "Intelsat 37e". SatBeams. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
- 1 2 "Azerspace 2". SatBeams. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- 1 2 Krebs, Gunter. "Intelsat 39". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- ↑ "Galaxy 4R". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Galaxy 5". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Galaxy 9". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Galaxy 10R". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- 1 2 Krebs, Gunter. "Galaxy 13 / Horizons 1". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ Choi, Charles Q. (3 May 2010). "Out-of-Control Satellite Threatens Other Nearby Spacecraft". space.com. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Galaxy 26". Satbeams. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ Krebs, Gunter. "Telstar 5, 6, 7 → Intelsat Americas 5, 6, 7 → Galaxy 25, 26, 27". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Galaxy 27". Satbeams. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- 1 2 "Arianespace, Intelsat and SKY Perfect JSAT sign a new Launch Services Agreement, for Horizons 3e" (Press release). Arianespace. 20 April 2017. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
- ↑ "SKY Perfect JSAT and Intelsat to Bring High Throughput Capacity to Asia Pacific to Meet Growing Mobility and Broadband Demands" (PDF). SKY Perfect JSAT Group & Intelsat. November 4, 2015. Retrieved 2016-07-28.
- ↑ Magan, Veronica (November 4, 2015). "Intelsat, JSAT Partner for Horizon 3e High Throughput Satellite for Asia Pacific". Retrieved 2016-07-28.
- ↑ "ChinaSat 5B". Satbeams. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Insat 2E". Satbeams. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Intelsat K". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ↑ "Outliving expectations: Marisat-F2 satellite held on for 32 years, served South Pole for 8". Spaceref.com. Retrieved 2016-02-26.
- ↑ "SBS 6". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
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