Mexsat-3

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Mexsat Bicentenario
Operator MEXSAT
Mission type Telecommunications satellite
Launch date 19 December 2012 18:50 (2012-12-19UTC18:50Z) UTC
Launch vehicle Ariane 5
Launch site Guiana Space Centre, Kourou, French Guiana
COSPAR ID 2012-075B
Mass 2,935 kilograms (6,471 lb)
Power 3.5 kW
Batteries Lithium Ion
Orbital elements
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Geostationary
Instruments
Spectral band C band, Ku band
Transponders
Transponders 24 (12 for each spectral band)

Mexsat-3, also known as Mexsat Bicentenario or simply Bicentenario, is the first of three Mexican satellites forming the MEXSAT telecommunications network, and is named to commemorate the bicentennial of the Independence of Mexico. It was launched on 19 December 2012 to serve the other two satellites in the network, Mexsat-1 and Mexsat-2, as a fixed satellite service. It was manufactured by the company Orbital Sciences Corporation and was launched from Kourou in French Guiana, and currently occupies the orbit 114.9° West.

Objectives

The Ministry of Communications and Transportation said in a statement that the new satellite would provide fixed broadband services for access to the Internet, digital high-quality satellite telephony, videoconferencing, remote medical care and education via television. It said that Bicentenario would provide services for emergency care "before, during and after emergencies".[1]

The satellite was equipped with instruments for transmitting and receiving electromagnetic signals in the C and Ku bands.[2]

Launch

The French company Arianespace launched an Ariane 5 rocket carrying the Mexsat-3 satellite from the Guiana Space Centre near Kourou, French Guiana at 18:50 local time (21:50 GMT) as part of a previously signed contract.[3] The rocket reached the 100 kilometre mark (the distance from Earth which can be considered an orbit) in the first three minutes.

The satellite was placed in a high geostationary orbit 36,000 kilometres above the surface.

The former deputy secretary of communications at the Ministry of Communications and Transportation, Hector Olavarria, revealed via Twitter after the launch that "in about thirty minutes we will know of the satellite's arrival in orbit".[4] Signals were successfully received shortly afterwards.

See also

References

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External links

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