Orbcomm (satellite) explained

Orbcomm
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Communication
Orbits:Low Earth orbit

Orbcomm is a family of low Earth orbit communications satellites, operated by the United States satellite communications company Orbcomm., 51 such satellites have orbited Earth, with 50 still continuing to do so.

Satellite types

Orbcomm-CDS

Orbcomm-X
Manufacturer:OSC
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Technology Demonstrator
Launch Mass:22kg (49lb)
Orbits:LEO
Status:Retired
Built:1
Launched:1
Failed:1
Derivatives:Orbcomm-CDS 1,2
Next:Orbcomm-CDS 1,2
Orbcomm-CDS 1,2
Manufacturer:OSC
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Technology Demonstrator
Launch Mass:13.6kg (30lb)
Orbits:Sun-synchronous
Status:Retired
Built:2
Launched:2
Retired:2
Derivedfrom:Orbcomm-X
Derivatives:Orbcomm-OG1
Previous:Orbcomm-X
Next:Orbcomm-OG1
Orbcomm-CDS 3
Manufacturer:PO Polyot (bus)
OSC (payload)
Designer:OHB-System
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Technology Demonstrator
Spacecraft Bus:Sterkh
Launch Mass:22kg (49lb)
Orbits:LEO
Status:Retired
Built:1
Launched:1
Retired:1
Derivatives:Orbcomm-QL
Next:Orbcomm-OG1

Orbcomm-CDS (Concept or Capability Demonstration Satellites) are spacecraft which were launched to test equipment and communication techniques used by the other satellites. The first three CDS satellites, Orbcomm-X, CDS-1 and CDS-2, were launched before any operational satellites, in order to validate the systems to be used in the operational constellation.

Orbcomm-X, also known as Datacomm-X, was launched in 1991. It carried communications and GPS experiments. Initially, the spacecraft was reported healthy, but communication was lost after just one orbit.[1]

CDS-3 was launched in 2008, along with the 5 Quick Launch satellites. It contained experiments for relaying signals from the United States Coast Guard Automatic Identification System through the satellite constellation.[2] It was designated Orbcomm FM-29, having acquired most of the communications payload from another satellite that was never launched. The avionics bus of this unlaunched satellite was later used on the TacSat-1 satellite. TacSat-1 was never launched, either.

Orbcomm-OG1

Orbcomm-OG1
Manufacturer:OSC
Country:United States
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Communications fleet
Spacecraft Type:Communications Satellite
Spacecraft Bus:MicroStar
Design Life:4 years
Launch Mass:40kgto45kgkg (90lbto99lbkg)
Orbits:LEO, mostly 720 km × 720 km × 45°
Status:Out of production
Built:36
Launched:35
Operational:24
Retired:11
Next:Orbcomm-QL

Orbcomm-1 or Orbcomm-OG1 satellites make up most of the current Orbcomm constellation. 36 were built, of which 35 were launched. The unlaunched satellite, original designation Orbcomm FM-29, was first cannibalized for parts for the CDS-3 satellite and then rebuilt as TacSat-1 for the United States military.[3]

Orbcomm-QL

Orbcomm-QL
Manufacturer:PO Polyot (bus)
OSC (payload)
Designer:OHB-System
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Fleet replenishment
Spacecraft Type:Communications Satellite
Spacecraft Bus:Sterkh
Design Life:8-10 years (actual achieved ~2 years)
Launch Mass:80kg (180lb)
Orbits:LEO, 672x × 48.45°
Status:Retired
Built:5
Launched:5
Retired:5
Derivedfrom:Orbcomm-CDS 3
Previous:Orbcomm-OG1
Next:Orbcomm-OG2

Orbcomm Quick Launch (Orbcomm-QL) satellites are satellites which were intended to replenish the constellation. The first five such satellites were launched in 2008, with one more planned, but never launched. The satellites are based on the CDS-3 satellite, which was launched on the same rocket as the first five QL spacecraft. The sixth will be launched as a secondary payload to a Russian Government satellite, also on a Kosmos-3M. Orbcomm holds options for two further satellites.[4] The satellites experienced a power system anomaly, and Orbcomm filed an insurance claim on the satellites for $50 million.[5] Orbcomm reported in 2011 that the last remaining Quick Launch satellite had failed.[6]

Orbcomm-OG2

Orbcomm-OG2
Manufacturer:Sierra Nevada Corporation (prime)
Argon ST (payload)
Country:United States
Operator:Orbcomm
Applications:Communications
Spacecraft Type:Communications Satellite
Spacecraft Bus:SN-100A
Design Life:5 years (planned)
Power:400 watts
Equipment:Orbcomm and AIS
Orbits:Low Earth orbit, 750 km × 750 km × 45°
Status:Operational
Built:18
Launched:18
Operational:12
Retired:5
Failed:1
Programme:Orbcomm constellation
Previous:Orbcomm-QL

Orbcomm Generation 2 (Orbcomm-OG2) second-generation satellites are intended to supplement and eventually replace the current first generation constellation. Eighteen satellites were ordered by 2008 — nominally intended to be launched in three groups of six during 2010–2014 — and by 2015 have all been launched, Orbcomm three flights. Orbcomm has options for a further thirty OG2 satellites.[7] The satellites were launched by SpaceX on the Falcon 9 launch vehicle. Originally, they were to launch on the smaller Falcon 1 launch vehicle.[8]

The first (Orbcomm OG2-1) of these satellites was launched on 8 October 2012 as secondary payload on a SpaceX Falcon 9 v1.0 flight. The primary payload was for NASA to the International Space Station (ISS).[9] [10] On this launch, the Falcon 9 had a failure in one of its nine first stage engines 79 seconds after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Florida. This prevented the OG2-1 prototype satellite from being deployed into the proper orbit.[11] The satellite functioned as planned during the short time it was in orbit. This allowed a subset of satellite systems to be flight-test validated. The orbit of the satellite was unable to be raised to a sustainable altitude due to contractual limitations put on SpaceX by the primary payload owner, NASA. Two days after its launch the OG2-1 prototype re-entered and burned up in the atmosphere of Earth. Orbcomm claimed the mission a total loss for launch insurance purposes.[12] [13]

The second launch, with a constellation of six OG2 satellites, launched on 14 July 2014.[14] [15] The satellites were launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 v1.1 launch vehicle. Following the end of the use of the first stage for the Orbcomm orbital mission, SpaceX used the booster stage — which would ordinarily be destroyed on reentering the Earth's atmosphere and impact with the ocean — for a flight test of a number of reusable launch vehicle technologies to safely reenter and execute a "soft vertical landing" on the ocean surface, where it successfully decelerated, made a successful reentry, landing burn and deployment of its landing legs. The first stage was not recovered as the hull integrity was breached on landing or on the subsequent "tip over and body slam".[16]

The third launch, with the final 11 second-generation OG2 satellites, was successfully completed December 21, 2015.[17] It was initially scheduled for late-2014, but ORBCOMM delayed the launch until at least mid-2015 [18] finally resetting the launch timeframe to mid-August through late-September 2015.[19] The launch date was further delayed by the rocket failure on the SpaceX Falcon 9 Flight 19 launch in June 2015, which ultimately delayed the OG2 launch further out to late 2015.[17] [20] The satellites were placed by the Falcon 9 launch vehicle "within a fraction of a degree in inclination and in altitude of the intended orbit", and by 9 January 2016, were in the middle of on-orbit testing, while executing propulsion maneuvers that had spread the 11 satellites over a orbital arc.[21]

The ORBCOMM OG2 satellites are being manufactured by an industry team led by Sierra Nevada Corporation and Argon ST, a Boeing subsidiary. A total of 18 ORBCOMM next-generation OG2 satellites were in production . ORBCOMM OG2 satellites will provide enhanced ORBCOMM messaging capabilities, increased capacity, and automatic identification systems (AIS) service. The agreement with SpaceX to launch 18 satellites on its Falcon 9 rockets was signed in December 2012 for a total cost of US$42.6 million.[22]

Launches

Launch Date/Time (GMT)Carrier RocketLaunch SiteSatelliteAlternative
Designation
Remarks
01:46, 17 July 1991Ariane 4 (40)ELA-2, CSGOrbcomm-XDatacomm-XEarly loss of communication
14:30, 9 February 1993[23] PegasusNB-52B, KSC SLFOrbcomm CDS-1OXPNo longer operational
13:56, 25 April 1993PegasusNB-52B, Edwards AFBOrbcomm CDS-2VSUMENo longer operational
13:48, 3 April 1995Pegasus-HL-1011, Vandenberg AFBOrbcomm-F1FM1No longer operational
Orbcomm-F2FM2No longer operational
19:11, 23 December 1997Pegasus-XL/HAPSL-1011, Wallops IslandOrbcomm-A1FM5
Orbcomm-A2FM6
Orbcomm-A3FM7
Orbcomm-A4FM8
Orbcomm-A5FM9
Orbcomm-A6FM10
Orbcomm-A7FM11
Orbcomm-A8FM12
13:20, 10 February 1998TaurusLC-576E, Vandenberg AFBOrbcomm-G1FM3No longer operational
Orbcomm-G2FM4
16:24, 2 August 1998Pegasus-XL/HAPSL-1011, Wallops IslandOrbcomm-B1FM13
Orbcomm-B2FM14
Orbcomm-B3FM15
Orbcomm-B4FM16No longer operational. Experienced in-orbit break-up on 22 December 2018 resulting in 34 trackable objects.[24] [25]
Orbcomm-B5FM17No longer operational
Orbcomm-B6FM18
Orbcomm-B7FM19
Orbcomm-B8FM20
05:06, 23 September 1998Pegasus-XL/HAPSL-1011, Wallops IslandOrbcomm-C1FM21
Orbcomm-C2FM22No longer operational
Orbcomm-C3FM23
Orbcomm-C4FM24No longer operational
Orbcomm-C5FM25No longer operational
Orbcomm-C6FM26No longer operational
Orbcomm-C7FM27
Orbcomm-C8FM28No longer operational
18:53, 4 December 1999Pegasus-XL/HAPSL-1011, Wallops IslandOrbcomm-D2FM30
Orbcomm-D3FM31
Orbcomm-D4FM32Semi-operational
Orbcomm-D5FM33No longer operational
Orbcomm-D6FM34
Orbcomm-D7FM35
Orbcomm-D8FM36No longer operational. Experienced in-orbit break-up on 11 March 2023 resulting in a number of untracked objects.[26]
06:36, 19 June 2008Kosmos-3MSite 107, Kapustin YarnowrapOrbcomm CDS-3FM29No longer operational
Orbcomm-QL1FM37No longer operational
Orbcomm-QL2FM38No longer operational
Orbcomm-QL3FM39No longer operational
Orbcomm-QL4FM40No longer operational
Orbcomm-QL5FM41No longer operational
05:31, 12 October 2011PSLV-CAFLP, Satish DhawanVesselSat-1FM42No longer operational (since end of 2015)
03:17, 9 January 2012Long March 4BLC-9, TaiyuanVesselSat-2FM43No longer operational (since January 2016)
00:35, 8 October 2012Falcon 9 v1.0 (Flight 4)SLC-40, Cape CanaveralOrbcomm OG2-1FM101Demo unit launch as a secondary payload, at low cost and with attendant lower launch services. The primary payload owner did not allow the second orbit raising burn, and thus OG2-1 was placed in a much lower orbit. Various tests of the new satellite design were completed, but OG2-1 never became fully operational. The sat reentered in only four days.[27]
15:15, 14 July 2014Falcon 9 v1.1 (Flight 10)SLC-40, Cape CanaveralOrbcomm OG2 × 6
  • FM103
  • FM104
  • FM106
  • FM107
  • FM109
  • FM111
FM104, FM106, and FM111 are no longer operational [28]
01:19, 22 December 2015SLC-40, Cape Canaveral
  • FM105
  • FM108
  • FM110
  • FM112
  • FM113
  • FM114
  • FM115
  • FM116
  • FM117
  • FM118
  • FM119
FM105 and FM119 are no longer operational.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Orbcomm-X. NASA. 2013-02-01.
  2. Web site: Orbcomm-CDS 3 (Orbcomm J1, Orbcomm FM29). Krebs. Gunter. Gunter's Space Page. 2008-10-19.
  3. Web site: Orbcomm 1 - 43. Krebs. Gunter. Gunter's Space Page. 2008-10-19.
  4. Web site: Orbcomm 37 - 41. Krebs. Gunter. Gunter's Space Page. 2008-10-19.
  5. Jai C.S., ORBCOMM Reaches Settlement on Satellite Insurance Claim December 28, 2009
  6. Web site: ORBCOMM Inc. - FORM 8-K - January 31, 2011. 2013-01-16.
  7. Web site: Orbcomm (2nd generation). Krebs. Gunter. Gunter's Space Page. 2008-10-19.
  8. Web site: SpaceX Wins Orbcomm Contract to Launch 18 Satellite Constellation. Satellite Today. 2009-09-03. 2009-09-03. 16 July 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110716010649/http://www.satellitetoday.com/st/topnews/SpaceX-Wins-Orbcomm-Contract-to-Launch-18-Satellite-Constellation_31968.html. dead.
  9. Orbcomm Eagerly Awaits Launch of New Satellite on Next Falcon 9. 25 May 2012. SpaceNews. https://archive.today/20130104173921/http://www.spacenews.com/satellite_telecom/120525-spacex-success-welcome-orbcomm.html. dead. 4 January 2013. 28 May 2012.
  10. Web site: International Space Station Program Status. NASA. 23 July 2012. 28 August 2012.
  11. Web site: Clark . Stephen. 8 October 2012. Orbcomm satellite in wrong orbit after Falcon 9 launch. Spaceflight Now. 8 October 2012.
  12. News: de Selding. Peter B.. Orbcomm Craft Launched by Falcon 9 Falls out of Orbit . 14 April 2023. SpaceNews. 2012-10-11. Orbcomm requested that SpaceX carry one of their small satellites (weighing a few hundred pounds, vs. Dragon at over 12,000 pounds)... The higher the orbit, the more test data [Orbcomm] can gather, so they requested that we attempt to restart and raise altitude. NASA agreed to allow that, but only on condition that there be substantial propellant reserves, since the orbit would be close to the space station. It is important to appreciate that Orbcomm understood from the beginning that the orbit-raising maneuver was tentative. They accepted that there was a high risk of their satellite remaining at the Dragon insertion orbit. SpaceX would not have agreed to fly their satellite otherwise, since this was not part of the core mission and there was a known, material risk of no altitude raise..
  13. Web site: Falcon Launch Report - Orbcomm craft falls to Earth, company claims total loss. Spaceflight Now. 11 October 2012. 29 May 2021.
  14. News: Graham. William . SpaceX's Falcon 9 set for fourth attempt to launch Orbcomm OG2 mission. 2014-07-14 . NASASpaceFlight.com. 2014-07-14.
  15. Web site: OG2 Launch. 16 June 2014. 16 June 2014.
  16. https://twitter.com/elonmusk "Rocket booster reentry, landing burn and leg deploy were good, but lost hull integrity right after splashdown (aka kaboom) ... Detailed review of rocket telemetry needed to tell if due to initial splashdown or subsequent tip over and body slam". Elon Musk SpaceX CEO
  17. News: de Selding. Peter B.. SpaceX Changes its Falcon 9 Return-to-flight Plans. 16 October 2015. SpaceNews. 2015-10-16.
  18. Web site: The Next Generation in Satellite M2M Technology: OG2 Mission 2 Coming Soon . Orbcomm. 24 January 2015.
  19. News: de Selding. Peter B.. Orbcomm to SpaceX: Launch our Satellites Before October. 8 May 2015 . SpaceNews. 2015-05-08.
  20. Web site: SpaceX ORBCOMM-2 Mission . 21 December 2015. press kit. SpaceX. 21 December 2015. This mission also marks SpaceX's return-to-flight as well as its first attempt to land a first stage on land. The landing of the first stage is a secondary test objective..
  21. http://blog.orbcomm.com/orbcomm-og2-mission-2-launch-update/ORBCOMM OG2 Mission 2 Launch Update
  22. Web site: Orbcomm, SpaceX Reach New Launch Agreement on OG2 Satellite Launch. Parabolic Arc. Messier. Doug. December 27, 2012. 1 February 2013.
  23. Web site: Pegasus. Wade. Mark. Encyclopedia Astronautica. 2008-10-19. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080905015100/http://astronautix.com/lvs/pegasus.htm. 2008-09-05.
  24. U.S. Air Force’s 18 Space Control Squadron. 18th_Space_Control_Squadron . 18spcs . 1080161833837780998 . 2019-01-01 .
    1. 18SPCS confirmed breakup of ORBCOMM OG1 sat FM 16, #25417, on 22 Dec @ 0712 UTC - tracking 34 pieces - no indication caused by collision.
    . en . 2019-01-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190101211612/https://twitter.com/18SPCS/status/1080161833837780998 . 2019-01-01.
  25. Web site: FIRST UP Satcom: Orbcomm satellite breaks up. 2019-01-02. Space News. 2019-01-29.
  26. 1636726437368479744 . planet4589. March 17, 2023. Breakup of the Orbcomm FM36 satellite reported by @18thSDS - no objects cataloged yet. TLEs show a 0.4 km downward jump in orbital height on the reported breakup date of Mar 11..
  27. http://spaceflightnow.com/falcon9/004/121011orbcomm/ Orbcomm craft falls to Earth, company claims total loss
  28. Web site: Orbcomm's Record Growth Not Stopped by OG2 Satellite Loss. Veronica Magan. Via Satellite. 7 August 2015.