Nilesat 101 Explained

Nilesat 101
Mission Type:Communications
Operator:Nilesat
Cospar Id:1998-024A
Satcat:25311
Mission Duration:18 years
Spacecraft Bus:Eurostar-2000
Manufacturer:Matra Marconi
Launch Mass:[1]
Power:watts
Launch Date: UTC
Launch Rocket:Ariane 44P
Launch Site:Kourou ELA-2
Launch Contractor:Arianespace
Disposal Type:Decommissioned
Orbit Epoch:29 October 2013, 10:24:24 UTC[2]
Orbit Reference:Geocentric
Orbit Regime:Geostationary
Orbit Periapsis:36512km (22,688miles)
Orbit Apoapsis:36725km (22,820miles)
Orbit Inclination:0.73 degrees
Orbit Period:24.64 hours
Orbit Longitude:7° West
Apsis:gee
Trans Band:12 Ku-band
Next Mission:Nilesat 102

Nilesat 101 is an Egyptian owned geosynchronous communications satellite that was decommissioned in February 2013.

Launch

Nilesat 101 was launched by an Ariane 4 rocket from Kourou, French Guiana on 28 April 1998 at 22:53:00 UTC by Arianespace. The satellite is powered by solar arrays, and the power is stored aboard batteries.

Mission

The satellite was manufactured by the European company Matra Marconi Space (Astrium), and started official broadcasting on 1 June 1998 with a mission life of 12 years. At launch the spacecraft had a gross mass of 1,666 kg.

Orbit

It was parked at the geostationary orbital position of 7° West together with its sister Satellite Nilesat 102 and carries 12 Ku band 100 W high power wide beam transponders of 33 MHz bandwidth to provide digital communications and terrestrial Direct to Home ((DTH)) TV, radio broadcasting, multimedia and data services for countries in North Africa, South Europe and the Middle East. The two satellites carry approximately 150 TV channels, with 100 of those originally coming from Nilesat 101, covering all the Middle East countries; north from Southern Europe to Central Africa, south, and east from Iran to the Atlantic Ocean, west. Nilesat 101 provided service to more than five million homes.[3]

Operations

Nilesat 101 was operated by The Egyptian satellite Co. Nilesat that was established in 1996 with the purpose of operating Egyptian satellites and their associated mission control center and ground stations. The two control centers are located in Cairo and Alexandria.[4]

See also

External links

0°N -7°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nilesat. 3 November 2016. Medea. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150710195133/http://www.medea.be/en/themes/medias/nilesat/. 10 July 2015.
  2. Web site: NILESAT Satellite details 1998-024A NORAD 25311. N2YO. 29 October 2013. 29 October 2013. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20130806060315/http://n2yo.com/satellite/?s=25311. 6 August 2013.
  3. Web site: Nilesat 101,102. Gunter's Space Page. 6 November 2016. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20161109232621/http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/nilesat-101.htm. 9 November 2016.
  4. Web site: Message from the Board - Message of the Board of Directors . Nilesat . 6 November 2016 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20110514200730/http://nilesat.com.eg/AboutUs/MessagefromtheBoard.aspx . 14 May 2011.