Yamal 201

Yamal 201 (Russian: Ямал-201) was a geostationary communications satellite operated by Gazkom and built by RSC Energia.[1] It was, along with Yamal 202 the second dual launch of the Yamal program and the second iteration of the USP Bus.[2][3][3] It was a 1,351 kg (2,978 lb) satellite with 4,080W of power (3.4 kW at end of life) on an unpressurized bus.[4] It had eight SPT-70 electric thrusters by OKB Fakel for station keeping.[5] Its payload was 9 C band and 6 Ku band transponders supplied by Space Systems Loral.[6][7]

Yamal 201 (Ямал-201)
NamesYamal 200 KA-1
Mission typeCommunication
OperatorGazprom Space Systems
COSPAR ID2003-053B
SATCAT no.28094
Mission duration3846 days (10 years 6.5 months)
Spacecraft properties
SpacecraftYamal 201
Spacecraft typeYamal 200
BusUSP Bus
ManufacturerRSC Energia (bus)
Alcatel Space (payload)
Launch mass1,351 kg (2,978 lb)
Power3400
Start of mission
Launch date06:22:00, November 24, 2003 (UTC) (2003-11-24T06:22:00Z)
RocketProton-K/Blok-DM-2M
Launch siteBaikonur Site 81/23
End of mission
DisposalFailed on orbit
DeactivatedJune 5, 2014
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGEO
Longitude90°E
Transponders
Frequency9 C band
6 Ku band
 

History

During 1997, even before the launch of their first satellites (Yamal 101 and Yamal 102), Gazkom was planning the second generation. At that time they planned a 24 satellites of the second generation. This extremely aggressive plan was scaled back by 2001 with a plan to launch four 200 series satellites. The first two, Yamal 201 and Yamal 202 would be launched by 2001 and the second pair, Yamal 203 and Yamal 204 by 2004. Yamal 201 and Yamal 203 would be identical and be positioned at the 90°E slot and Yamal 202 and Yamal 204 would also be twins and be positioned at the 49°E slot.

Yamal 201 was launched along Yamal 202 November 24, 2003 at 16:2 UTC from Baikonur Site 81/23 by a Proton-K/Blok-DM-2M directly to GEO.[8] The launch and satellite deployment was successful and Yamal 201 was commissioned into service.[9] On June 5, 2014 Yamal 201 failed and the clients had to be moved to other satellites of the network. The satellite lasted 3846 days (10 years 6.5 months), short of the design life of 12.5 years.[10][11][4]

gollark: Yes, but you can still write them down, and at least we won't run out for a while.
gollark: IPv6 allows 340282366920938463463374607431768211456 addresses.
gollark: Yes; IPv4 had too few and is thus uncool.
gollark: There's notation where you can elide zeros and stuff, but that address doesn't use that.
gollark: You have 8 sections of 4 hexadecimal digits each.

See also

  • Yamal 202 – Satellite that was launched together with.
  • Yamal – Communication satellite family operated by Gazprom Space Systems.
  • Gazprom Space Systems – Satellite communication division of the Russian oil giant Gazprom.
  • USP Bus – The satellite bus on which Yamal 201 is based.
  • RSC Energia – The designer and manufacturer of the Yamal 201 satellite.

References

  1. Zak, Anatoly (April 21, 2016). "Yamal communication satellites". RussiaSpaceWeb.com. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  2. Pillet, Nicolas. "Yamal/Historie/Premier tir, premier revers" [Yamal/History/The first setbacks]. Kosmonavtika (in French). Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  3. Pillet, Nicolas. "Yamal/Historie/La deuxième génération" [Yamal/History/The second generation]. Kosmonavtika (in French). Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  4. "Universal Space Platform". RSC Energia. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  5. Krebs, Gunter Dirk (2015-10-16). "RKK Energiya: USP (Victoria)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  6. Pillet, Nicolas. "Descriptif technique Yamal-200" [Yamal-200 technical description]. Kosmonavtika (in French). Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  7. "Yamal 201". Satbeams. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  8. Pillet, Nicolas. "Proton-K 24 novembre 2003" [November 24, 2003 Proton-K]. Kosmonavtika (in French). Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  9. Krebs, Gunter Dirk (2016-04-17). "Yamal 201, 203". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  10. "Russian satellite failure leads to channels move". DigitalTVEurope.NET. June 9, 2014. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
  11. Todd, David (June 10, 2014). "Yamal 201 may have failed in orbit as customers are moved to other satellites". Seradata Space Intelligence. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
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