MEASAT-3 explained

MEASAT-3
Operator:MEASAT
Cospar Id:2006-056A
Satcat:29648
Mission Duration:15 years
Spacecraft Bus:BSS-601
Manufacturer:Boeing
Launch Date: UTC
Launch Rocket:Proton-M/Briz-M
Launch Site:Baikonur 200/39
Launch Contractor:International Launch Services
Disposal Type:Decommissioned
Deactivated:September 9th 2021
Orbit Epoch:28 October 2013, 21:08:19 UTC
Orbit Reference:Geocentric
Orbit Regime:Geostationary
Orbit Periapsis:35787km (22,237miles)
Orbit Apoapsis:35796km (22,243miles)
Orbit Inclination:0.05 degrees
Orbit Period:23.93 hours
Orbit Longitude:91.5° east
Apsis:gee
Trans Band:24 C-band
24 Ku-band

MEASAT-3 was a Malaysian communications satellite which was successfully launched on 11 December 2006 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.[1]

In March 2003, MEASAT Satellite Systems Sdn. Bhd. of Malaysia ordered a Boeing 601HP satellite, giving it the designation MEASAT-3 at that time. MEASAT-3 joined the existing Boeing-built MEASAT-1 and MEASAT-2 spacecraft in the Malaysia-East Asia Satellite (MEASAT) system.

International Launch Services (ILS) was contracted as the launch provider. Boeing was specified to also provide an upgrade to the MEASAT ground facilities in Malaysia, as well as training and launch support services.

MEASAT-3 was by International Launch Services using a Proton-M rocket with a Briz-M upper stage. The upper stage made five burns to place MEASAT-3 into a geostationary transfer orbit. After circularisation and testing, the satellite entered commercial service on January 25, 2007, in geostationary orbit at a longitude of 91.5 degrees East where it is co-located with MEASAT-1. The C band and now covers geographically remote areas such as Sabah, Sarawak, and North India and expands the MEASAT fleet's coverage to more than 100 countries embracing Australia, Middle East, Eastern Europe and Africa.

On 21 June 2021, an anomaly caused the satellite to drift out of its position, causing service disruptions for Astro customers throughout Malaysia.[2] Although MEASAT is still commanding the satellite it is unable to stop MEASAT-3 from continuing to drift, now located at 84.69°E.[3] Because of this, all transponders have been shut down and services migrated to other MEASAT and third party satellites.

Its replacement, the MEASAT-3d, is expected to be launched in 2022.[4]

Transponders

C BAND TRANSPONDERS
EIRP (dBW)41 (Global beam), 45 (Asia beam)
G/T (dB/K)+0.5 (Global beam), +2.8 (Asia beam)
TWTA power65 Watts
Transponder bandwidth24x36 MHz
Channel polarizationLinear
Frequency bandUplink: 5,925-6,725 MHz
Downlink: 3,400-4,200 MHz
Ku BAND TRANSPONDERS
EIRP (dBW)57 (Maximum)
G/T (dB/K)+14 (Maximum)
TWTA power120 Watts
Transponder bandwidth24x36 MHz
Channel polarizationLinear
Frequency bandUplink: 13.75-14.5 GHz
Downlink: 10.95-12.75 GHz

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Proton M/Breeze M-MEASAT-3. International Launch Services. 2009-07-02. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090215115536/http://ilslaunch.com/proton86. 2009-02-15.
  2. Web site: 2021-06-21. Astro Customers Currently Facing Service Disruption Due To Satellite Outage. 2021-07-18. Lowyat.NET. en-US.
  3. Web site: MEASAT-3 Satellite Updates. July 17, 2021. November 23, 2022. MEASAT.
  4. Web site: 2021-07-17. MEASAT-3 Satellite Drifting In An Uncontrolled Geostationary Orbit, Likely To Be A Total Loss. 2021-07-18. Lowyat.NET. en-US.