Astra 1A

Telecommunications satellite

Astra 1A
Mission typeCommunications
OperatorSES S.A.
COSPAR ID1988-109B Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.19688
Websitehttps://www.ses.com/
Mission duration12 years (planned)
16 years (achieved)
Spacecraft properties
BusAS-4000
ManufacturerGE Astro Space
(now Lockheed Martin Space Systems)
Launch mass1,768 kg (3,898 lb) [1]
Dimensions1.5 m x 1.7 m x 2.1 m
(solar panels span of 19.3 m)
Power2.6 kW[1]
Start of mission
Launch date11 December 1988,
00:33:28 UTC
RocketAriane 44LP (V27)
Launch siteCentre Spatial Guyanais, ELA-2
ContractorArianespace
Entered service5 February 1989
End of mission
DisposalGraveyard orbit
DeactivatedDecember 2004
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric orbit[2]
RegimeGeostationary orbit
Longitude19.2° East (1989–2001)
19.4° East (2001)
5.2° East (2001–2004)
Transponders
Band16 Ku-band (45 watts)
Bandwidth26 MHz
Coverage areaWestern Europe
Astra constellation
 

Astra 1A was the first satellite launched and operated by SES (Société Européenne des Satellites), launched in December 1988. During its early days, it was often referred to as the Astra Satellite, as SES only operated one satellite originally. The satellite provided 16 transponders(+6 as rescue) and television coverage to Western Europe from 1989 to 2004. Astra 1A was retired and became derelict in December 2004.

Channels

Among the channels carried in the early years after launch were the entire four channel Sky Television (later British Sky Broadcasting, after the merger with rival British Satellite Broadcasting on the Marcopolo satellite), the services consisted of Sky Channel, Sky News, Sky Movies and Eurosport, the Scandinavian TV3 and TV1000, the German Pro7, Sat.1, RTL plus, 3sat and Teleclub, the Dutch RTL 4 as well as FilmNet, Screensport, MTV Europe, The Children's Channel and Lifestyle.[3]

Astra 1A began television broadcasts on 5 February 1989. Until 1998 all of SES' satellites were co-located with Astra 1A at 19.2° East, leading that position to be known mostly as Astra 1 (later, Astra 19.2°E).

History

The satellite came into its position on 7 January 1989. FilmNet became the first channel on the satellite when it launched on transponder 11 on 1 February 1989. Other channels such as Sky Channel, Eurosport, Sky News and Sky Movies from Sky Television, as well as the Scandinavian TV3 (Sweden) and MTV Europe all launched in February 1989. The Children's Channel/Lifestyle and Screensport followed in March 1989. The Scandinavian pay channel TV1000 launched in August 1989.

Sky Television had originally planned to launch The Disney Channel and Sky Arts on the Astra satellite in 1989,[4] but these plans failed to materialize. The transponders intended for these channels, were used for Eurosport and the Dutch RTL Veronique (which would later become RTL4), respectively. The first German language programmes, RTL plus, Sat.1 and Pro 7 all launched on 8 December 1989. With the launch of 3sat in March 1990 and Teleclub in June 1990 all transponders were occupied.

Lifestyle was replaced by VOX in January 1993. Soon thereafter, Screensport merged with Eurosport and its transponder was replaced by RTL2. RTL 4 moved to Astra 1D in 1995 and was replaced by Super RTL. Teleclub was replaced by Kabel 1 during the same year. TV3 and TV1000 left Astra in 1996 and their transponders were taken over by BSkyB who used them for Fox Kids/Sky Two and Granada Plus/Granada Men & Motors. Filmnet also left in 1996, to be replaced by Bloomberg Germany in 1997. BSkyB ended their analogue service in 2001, which meant that its services closed down. By the end of 2001, the satellite was moved from 19.2° East to serve few years at 5.2° East.

On 19.2° East, the satellite was replaced by Astra 1F. Many channels, including RTL II, RTL, Eurosport, VOX, Sat.1, Kabel Eins, Super RTL and ProSieben were still broadcasting in analogue on the same frequencies in 2009.[5]

In December 2004, Astra 1A was moved into a "graveyard orbit" after some time at 5.2° East providing data services.

Technical issues

As with all GE Astro Space manufactured satellites, the AS-4000 Ku-band satellite design was used for the spacecraft bus, propulsion, thermal protection and solar array, the thermal protection made to protect Astra 1A's 16 transponder payload on board from the Sun's solar wind and cosmic rays.

While never confirmed by SES, Astra 1A is believed to have experienced a number of technical problems throughout its lifetime, including overheating and power system anomalies.[6] After the launch of Astra 1C in 1993, two transponders (4 and 15) were moved from Astra 1A to Astra 1C.[6][7] Transponder 1 was also moved to Astra 1F after its launch, leaving 13 operational transponders on Astra 1A in the late 1990s.[7] Between February and April 1999, transponder 10 was also moved to Astra 1F.[8]

In mid-1999, the satellite experienced a loss of power which reduced its usable payload to 6 transponders.[6][9] Transponders 3, 7, 8, 11, 12 and 16 remained on Astra 1A while the others were transferred to Astra 1F; Astra 1C continued to carry transponders 4 and 15 as before.[9] Documentation provided by SES since this event stated the usable payload as 5/6 transponders.[1]

Transponders

Transponder Frequency Channels carried
1 11,214 H Screensport (1989–1993), RTL2 (1993–2012)
2 11,229 V RTL (1989–2012)
3 11,244 H TV3 Sweden (1989–1996), Granada Plus/Granada Men & Motors (1996–2001), RTL Shop (2001–2009)
4 11,259 V Eurosport (1989–2012)
5 11,273 H Lifestyle/The Children's Channel (1989–1993), VOX/The Quantum Channel (1993–1999), Vox (1999-2012)
6 11,288 V Sat.1 (1989–2012)
7 11,303 H TV1000 (1989–1996), Sky2 (1996–1997), Fox Kids (1997–2001), Viva Zwei (2001), Viva Plus, (2002–2007)
8 11,318 V Sky One (1989–2001)
9 11,332 H Eurosport (1989), Teleclub (1990–1995), Kabel 1 (1995–2012)
10 11,347 V 3sat (1990–2012)
11 11,362 H FilmNet (1989–1997), Adult Channel (1997), Bloomberg UK (1997–1998), Sky Box Office 3 (1998–2000), Bloomberg DE (2000–2008)
12 11,377 V Sky News (1989–2001)
13 11,391 H RTL-V (1989–1990), RTL 4 (1990–1995), Super RTL (1995–2012)
14 11,406 V Pro Sieben (1989–2012)
15 11,421 H MTV Europe (1989–1997), MTV UK & Ireland (1997–2001), MTV 2 POP (2001–2005)
16 11,436 V Sky Movies (1989–1997), Sky Movies Screen 1 (1997–1998), Sky Moviemax (1998–2001), Fox News (2001–2002)

References

  • Spaceflight portal
  1. ^ a b c "SES fact sheet on Astra 1A at 5.2° East (February 2003)" (PDF). SES Astra. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  2. ^ "ASTRA 1A 1988-109B 19688". N2YO.com. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  3. ^ "Astra satellite channels". EUNET. 9 September 1990. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  4. ^ Leaflet from Astra sent out to German reatilers in May 1989 Archived March 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Lyngsat Astra 1F". Archived from the original on 4 February 2009. Retrieved 8 February 2009.
  6. ^ a b c "TSE – Astra 1A". TBS Satellite. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  7. ^ a b "LyngSat Astra 1A". LyngSat. Archived from the original on 9 February 1999. Retrieved 6 April 2021. (channels marked AH1, AV2, AH2 or AV1 were on 1A)
  8. ^ "LyngSat Astra 1A". LyngSat. Archived from the original on 28 April 1999. Retrieved 6 December 2014. (transponder 10 moved to 1F)
  9. ^ a b "LyngSat Astra 1F". LyngSat. Archived from the original on 13 October 1999. Retrieved 6 December 2014. (all but 6 transponders moved to Astra 1C and Astra 1F)

External links

  • Official SES website
  • SES fleet information and map
  • Highlights of SES history
  • Celebrating 20 years of UK satellite TV, TechRadar
  • 30 Years of Satellite Television in Poland, Próbakő Communications
  • v
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Satellites operated by SES S.A.
SES fleetAMC fleet
NSS fleet
Astra fleet
Third parties
  • v
  • t
  • e
Orbital launches in 1988
January
  • Kosmos 1908
  • Kosmos 1909, Kosmos 1910, Kosmos 1911, Kosmos 1912, Kosmos 1913, Kosmos 1914
  • Gorizont No.25L
  • Progress 34
  • Kosmos 1915
  • Meteor-2 No.20
February
  • USA-29
  • Kosmos 1916
  • USA-30
  • Kosmos 1919, Kosmos 1917, Kosmos 1918
  • Kosmos 1920
  • Kosmos 1921
  • Sakura 3a
  • Kosmos 1922
March
  • Zhongxing-1
  • Kosmos 1923
  • Kosmos 1924, Kosmos 1925, Kosmos 1926, Kosmos 1927, Kosmos 1928, Kosmos 1929, Kosmos 1930, Kosmos 1931
  • Molniya-1 No.65
  • Spacenet 3R, Telecom 1C
  • Kosmos 1932
  • Kosmos 1933
  • IRS-1A
  • Molniya-1 No.64
  • Kosmos 1934
  • Progress 35
  • Kosmos 1935
  • San Marco 5
  • Kosmos 1936
  • Gorizont No.26L
April
  • Kosmos 1937
  • Kosmos 1938
  • Foton No.4L
  • Kosmos 1939
  • Transit-O 23, Transit-O 32
  • Kosmos 1940
  • Kosmos 1941
May
  • Ekran No.31L
  • Kosmos 1942
  • Progress 36
  • Kosmos 1943
  • Intelsat VA F-13
  • Kosmos 1944
  • Kosmos 1945
  • Kosmos 1946, Kosmos 1947, Kosmos 1948
  • Molniya-3 No.49
  • Kosmos 1949
  • Kosmos 1950
  • Kosmos 1951
June
  • Soyuz TM-5
  • Kosmos 1952
  • Kosmos 1953
  • Meteosat 3, PAS-1, OSCAR-13
  • Nova 2
  • Kosmos 1954
  • Kosmos 1955
  • Kosmos 1956
July
August
  • Kosmos 1961
  • Fanhui Shi Weixing I-02
  • Kosmos 1962
  • Molniya-1 No.66
  • Kosmos 1963
  • Gorizont No.28L
  • Kosmos 1964
  • Kosmos 1965
  • Transit-O 25, Transit-O 31
  • Soyuz TM-6
  • Kosmos 1966
September
  • USA-31
  • USA-32
  • Kosmos 1967
  • Fengyun I-01
  • GStar-3, SBS-5
  • Kosmos 1968
  • Progress 38
  • Kosmos 1969
  • Kosmos 1970, Kosmos 1971, Kosmos 1972
  • Sakura 3b
  • Ofek-1
  • Kosmos 1973
  • NOAA-11
  • Molniya-3 No.51
  • STS-26 (TDRS-3)
October
November
  • USA-33
  • Unnamed
  • Buran 1K1 (37KB No.3770)
  • Kosmos 1979
  • Kosmos 1980
  • Kosmos 1981
  • Soyuz TM-7
  • Kosmos 1982
December
  • STS-27 (USA-34)
  • Kosmos 1983
  • Ekran-M No.12L
  • Skynet 4B, Astra 1A
  • Kosmos 1984
  • Zhongxing-2
  • Molniya-3 No.52
  • Kosmos 1985
  • Progress 39
  • Molniya-1 No.63
  • Kosmos 1986
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ). Cubesats are smaller.
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).