Galaxy 25 Explained

Galaxy 25
Names List:G-25
Intelsat Americas 5
IA-5
Telstar 5
Mission Type:Communications
Operator:Loral Skynet (1997-2007)
Intelsat (2007-)
Cospar Id:1997-026A
Satcat:24812
Website:https://www.intelsat.com
Mission Duration:12 years (planned)
Spacecraft Bus:LS-1300
Manufacturer:Space Systems/Loral
Launch Date:24 May 1997, 17:00:00 UTC
Launch Rocket:Proton-K / DM-04
Launch Site:Baikonur, Site 81/23
Launch Contractor:Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center
Orbit Reference:Geocentric orbit
Orbit Regime:Geostationary orbit
Orbit Longitude:97° West
Apsis:gee
Trans Band:52 transponders:
24 C-band
28 Ku-band
Trans Bandwidth:36 MHz, 54 MHz, 27 MHz
Trans Coverage:Hawaii, Canada, United States, Mexico, Caribbean
Programme:Intelsat constellation
Previous Mission:Telstar 402R
Next Mission:Galaxy 26

Galaxy 25 (G-25) launched in 1997, contracted by International Launch Services (ILS), formerly known as Intelsat Americas 5 (IA-5) until 15 February 2007 when it was renamed as result of the merger between owner Intelsat and PanAmSat for Telstar 5, is a medium-powered communications satellite formerly in a geostationary orbit at 97° West, above a point in the Pacific Ocean several hundred miles west of the Galapagos Islands. It was manufactured by Space Systems/Loral using its LS-1300 satellite bus and is currently owned and operated by Intelsat. The satellite's main C-band transponder cluster covers the United States, Canada, and Mexico; its main Ku-band transponder cluster covers the United States, Mexico, and the Northern Caribbean Sea. An additional C-band and a Ku-band transponder pair targets Hawaii.

Galaxy 25 has a projected life of 12 years. It was replaced by Galaxy 19 (formerly IA-9) in late 2008.[1] When it was last in service at 97.1° West, Galaxy 25 transmitted both Free-to-air (FTA) direct-to-home (DTH) broadcasting and encrypted subscription channels / services. The replacement satellite, Galaxy 19 was successfully launched on September 24, 2008.[2] Galaxy 25 has been moved to a different orbital position at 93.1° West where it is currently broadcasting several services on its Ku band transponders.

Technical details

Key Parameters
Total Transponders C-Band: 24x36 MHz
Ku-Band:4x54 MHz, 24x27 MHz
Polarization C-Band: Linear - Horizontal or Vertical
Ku-Band:Linear - Horizontal or Vertical
e.i.r.p. (C-Band)
e.i.r.p. (Ku-Band)
  • CONUS: 48.3 dBW
  • Alaska: 40.9 dBW
  • Caribbean: 43.4 dBW
  • Hawaii: 46.4 dBW
  • Mexico: 43.6 dBW
  • Puerto Rico / United States Virgin Islands: 44.9 dBW
  • Southern Canada: 44.3 dBW
Uplink Frequency C-Band: 5925 to 6425 MHz
Ku-Band: 14.00 to 14.50 GHz
Downlink Frequency C-Band 3700 to 4200 MHz
Ku-Band: 11.7 to 12.2 GHz
G/T (C-Band)
  • CONUS: -0.7 dB/K
  • Alaska: -8.2 dB/K
  • Caribbean: -4.7 dB/K
  • Hawaii: -5.2 dB/K
  • Mexico: -5.4 dB/K
  • Puerto Rico / United States Virgin Islands: -4.6 dB/K
  • Southern Canada: -2.3 dB/K
G/T (Ku-Band)
  • CONUS: +0.7 dB/K
  • Alaska: -3.3 dB/K
  • Caribbean: -3.2 dB/K
  • Hawaii: +0.6 dB/K
  • Mexico: -4.2 dB/K
  • Puerto Rico / United States Virgin Islands: +0.7 dB/K
  • Southern Canada: -1.6 dB/K
SFD Range (Beam Edge)C-Band: -92.0 to -71.0 dBW/m2
Ku-Band: -96.0 to -75.0 dBW/m2

Platform operators

The Ku-Band side of the satellite carried the platforms of Pittsburgh International Telecommunications, Inc (PIT), Globecast, RRSat, and ABS-CBN, with free-to-air and encrypted television and radio programming in a variety of languages.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Intelsat Satellite Launch Schedule . 2008-05-17. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080517182823/http://www.intelsat.com/network/satellite/scheduled-launch.asp. 2008-05-17. Intelsat launch information
  2. News: Sea Launch deploys new Galaxy for North America . September 24, 2008. Spaceflight Now. December 5, 2022.