Galaxy 17 is a communications satellite owned by Intelsat to be located at 91° West longitude, serving the North American market. Galaxy 17 was intended to replace SBS 6. It was built by Alcatel Alenia Space (which is now Thales Alenia Space), in its Cannes Mandelieu Space Center, France.[4]

Galaxy 17
Mission typeCommunication[1]
OperatorIntelsat
COSPAR ID2007-016B Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.31307
Mission duration15 years (design life)[2]
Spacecraft properties
BusSpacebus 3000B3
ManufacturerAlcatel Alenia Space
Launch mass4,100 kilograms (9,000 lb)[2]
Power9.5 kilowatts
Start of mission
Launch date4 May 2007, 22:29 (2007-05-04UTC22:29Z) UTC
RocketAriane 5ECA[2]
Launch siteKourou ELA-3[1][2]
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeGeostationary
Longitude91° West(0°N 91°W / 0°N 91°W / 0; -91)
Perigee altitude35,526 kilometres (22,075 mi)[3]
Apogee altitude35,815 kilometres (22,254 mi)[3]
Inclination0.05 degrees[3]
Period1,430.16 minutes[3]
Epoch13 May 2007[3]
Transponders
Band24 C band
24 Ku band
Coverage areaNorth America
 

Galaxy 17 was launched by Arianespace from Kourou, French Guiana on an Ariane 5 rocket along with Astra 1L. It became operational at 74° West longitude in the geostationary orbit and replaced SBS-6 which was moved out of the geostationary orbit to a parking orbit in the Graveyard orbit. This took place on July 7, 2007. Galaxy 17 began its move to 91° West longitude when Horizons-2 was launched and placed in the 74° West longitude slot. Horizons-2 was originally slated to replace SBS-6 but the launch was delayed, possibly due to the delayed repairs of the Sea Launch vessel.

Galaxy 17 is the first primarily European satellite to cover the U.S. Built by a French/Italian manufacturer, it was launched on a French rocket from a French spaceport. Galaxy 17 became operational again in mid July, 2008, when it took over traffic of Galaxy 11. As Galaxy 11 has effectively been replaced, any references to Galaxy 11 can now be considered references to Galaxy 17.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "NSSDC Master Catalog: Galaxy 17". NASA NSSDC. 2008-08-05. Retrieved 2008-11-07.
  2. ^ a b c d Krebs, Gunter (2008-05-31). "Galaxy 17". Skyrocket.de. Retrieved 2008-11-07.
  3. ^ a b c d e McDowell, Jonathan. "SATCAT". Jonathan's Space Pages. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  4. ^ News report on launch

External links edit