Intelsat VA F-11 → Intelsat 511 | |
Mission Type: | Communication |
Operator: | Intelsat |
Cospar Id: | 1985-055A [1] |
Satcat: | 15873 |
Mission Duration: | 7 years (planned) |
Spacecraft Bus: | Intelsat VA |
Manufacturer: | Ford Aerospace |
Dry Mass: | 1098 kg [2] |
Launch Mass: | 1981 kg |
Power: | 1800 watts |
Launch Date: | 30 June 1985, 00:44:00 UTC [3] |
Launch Rocket: | Atlas G (AC-64) |
Launch Site: | CCAFS, LC-36B |
Launch Contractor: | General Dynamics |
Dimensions: | 1.66 x 2.1 x 1.77 metres |
Disposal Type: | Graveyard orbit |
Deactivated: | August 2003 |
Orbit Epoch: | 30 June 1985 |
Orbit Reference: | Geocentric orbit |
Orbit Regime: | Geostationary orbit |
Orbit Longitude: | 27.5° West (1985-1991) 63.0 East (1991-1992) 177.0° East (1992-1995) 180.0° East (1995-1998) 29.5° West (1998-2003) |
Apsis: | gee |
Trans Band: | 26 C-band 6 Ku-band |
Programme: | Intelsat V |
Previous Mission: | Intelsat VA F-10 |
Next Mission: | Intelsat VA F-12 |
Intelsat VA F-11, then named Intelsat 511, was a communications satellite operated by Intelsat. Launched in 1985, it was the eleventh of fifteen Intelsat V satellites to be launched. The Intelsat VA series was constructed by Ford Aerospace, based on the Intelsat VA satellite bus. Intelsat VA F-11 was part of an advanced series of satellites designed to provide greater telecommunications capacity for Intelsat's global network.
The satellite was box-shaped, measuring 1.66 by 2.1 by 1.77 metres; solar arrays spanned 15.9 metres tip to tip. The arrays, supplemented by nickel-hydrogen batteries during eclipse, provided 1800 watts of power at mission onset, approximately 1280 watts at the end of its seven-year design life. The payload housed 26 C-band and 6 Ku-band transponders. It could accommodate 15,000 two-way voice circuits and two TV channels simultaneously. It also provided maritime communications for ships at sea.[4]
The satellite was successfully launched into space on 30 June 1985, at 00:44:00 UTC, by means of an Atlas G-Centaur-D1AR vehicle from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, United States. It had a launch mass of 1981 kg.[5] The satellite was deactivated in August 2003.