Double success for
Ariane 5: satellites Star One D2 and EUTELSAT
QUANTUM placed in geostationary transfer orbit
July 30,
Ariane 5 VA254 flight
successfully placed two satellites in orbit from
the Guiana Space Center (CSG): Star One D2,
built by Maxar Technologies for Brazilian
operator Embratel, and EUTELSAT QUANTUM for
Eutelsat, developed with Airbus Defence and
Space and the European Space Agency (ESA).
“With this new Ariane 5
success, the first in 2021, Arianespace is
pleased to be continuing its service to two of
its most loyal customers, operators Embratel and
Eutelsat,” said Stéphane Israël, CEO of
Arianespace. “This mission with two highly
innovative satellites on board, built by Maxar
Technologies and developed by Airbus Defence and
Space and ESA respectively, has reconfirmed how
the competitiveness and reliability of our
launch solutions serves the ambitions of our
customers. We are committed to their total
satisfaction, through our current launchers,
Ariane 5, Soyuz and Vega, and future launchers
with Ariane 6 and Vega C.”
Star One D2 is a
high-capacity, multi-mission satellite with Ku-,
Ka-, C- and X-band transponders, that will
enable it to expand broadband coverage to new
regions in Central and South America and add an
updated X-band payload for government use over
the Atlantic region. Built on Maxar’s proven
1300-class platform at the company’s Palo Alto,
California, manufacturing facility, Star One D2
will improve access to high-quality services,
serving the parabolic fleet in Brazil, Pay TV,
cell phone backhaul, data, video and Internet
for corporate customers and government agencies.
The EUTELSAT QUANTUM
satellite was developed in the framework of a
public-private partnership between the European
Space Agency (ESA), the operator Eutelsat and
Airbus Defence and Space. With its configurable
software-based design, EUTELSAT QUANTUM will be
the first universal satellite in the world that
can be repeatedly adjusted to the customer’s
requirements at any time. It is equipped with
electronically steerable receiving antennae and
operates in Ku-band with eight independent
reconfigurable beams. This configuration allows
the operator to reconfigure in-orbit the
radio-frequency beams over the coverage zones,
providing unprecedented flexibility in data,
government and mobility services.
The relationship between
Arianespace and both Embratel and Eutelsat goes
back more than three decades and has only become
stronger over time. Since 1985, the year of its
first mission for Embratel, Arianespace has
launched the Brazilian operator’s entire fleet
of 12 satellites. In addition, global operator
Eutelsat has entrusted the launch of 36
satellites to Arianespace since 1983.
For this flight, the
performance required of the Ariane 5 was 10,515
kg, including 9,651 kg for both payloads. Ariane
5 was also equipped with a cryogenic upper stage
called ESC-D, whose tanks were extended for this
mission, with an overall mass of the stage at
liftoff of more than 19 metric tons.
“Ariane 5 blasting off from
the Guiana Space Center is a strong symbol at
this time when Europe is resetting its ambitions
for space, in particular with launchers,” said
André-Hubert Roussel, CEO of ArianeGroup.
“Congratulations to the teams at ArianeGroup and
Arianespace and all our partners, who once again
demonstrated their remarkable professionalism
with a perfect launch campaign. Our solid
expertise will also be a major factor in the
success of Ariane 6, for which the first flight
model is currently being integrated at our sites
in France and Germany.”
ArianeGroup is the lead
contractor for the development and production of
Ariane 5 and Ariane 6 launchers. The company
coordinates an industrial network of more than
600 companies (including 350 SMEs). ArianeGroup
oversees the entire Ariane 5 industrial supply
chain, from performance optimization and
associated studies, to production and
mission-specific data and software. This chain
includes equipment and structures, engine
manufacturing, integration of the various
stages, and launcher integration in French
Guiana. ArianeGroup delivers a flight-ready
launcher on the launch pad to its subsidiary
Arianespace, which operates the flight from
lift-off, on behalf of its customers.
Ariane 5 is a program of
the European Space Agency (ESA), carried out in
cooperation between public institutions and
industry. Marketed and operated by Arianespace,
the Ariane 5 launches take place from the Guiana
Space Centre in Kourou, with the support of
teams from the French space agency CNES.