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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Technical characteristics  





3 Transmissions  



3.1  French public analogue  





3.2  French public digital  



3.2.1  Regulatory obligations for the FRANSAT bouquet  





3.2.2  Chronology  







3.3  Free to air channels on Eutelsat 5 West A  







4 References  





5 External links  














Eutelsat 5 West A






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Eutelsat 5 West A

Atlantic Bird 3 satellite

Names

Atlantic Bird 3
AB 3
Stellat 5

Mission type

Communications

Operator

Eutelsat

COSPAR ID

2002-035A [1]

SATCAT no.

27460

Website

https://www.eutelsat.com/en/home.html

Mission duration

15 years (planned)[2]
20 years (achieved)

Spacecraft properties

Spacecraft

Stellat 5 / Atlantic Bird 3

Spacecraft type

Spacebus

Bus

Spacebus 3000 B3

Manufacturer

Alcatel Space

Launch mass

4,050 kg (8,930 lb)

Dry mass

1,805 kg (3,979 lb)

Dimensions

5.47 m x 3.45 m x 2.44 m

Power

11kW

Start of mission

Launch date

5 July 2002, 23:22:00 UTC

Rocket

Ariane 5G (V153)

Launch site

Centre Spatial Guyanais, ELA-3

Contractor

Arianespace

Entered service

September 2002

End of mission

Disposal

Graveyard orbit[3]

Deactivated

January 2023[3]

Last contact

9:57 Jan. 13 2023 (UTC)[3]

Orbital parameters

Reference system

Geocentric orbit

Regime

Geostationary orbit

Longitude

5° West

Transponders

Band

45transponders:
10C-band
35Ku-band

Coverage area

Europe, Africa, Middle East

Eutelsat constellation
 

Eutelsat 5 West A, formerly Atlantic Bird 3 (orAB 3) was a communications satellite belonging to the operator Eutelsat. Situated at 5° West, it broadcast satellite television, radio and other digital data. Developed for France Telecom it was transferred soon after its launch to the operator Eutelsat. It entered operational service in early September 2002. Its anticipated working life was 15 years. It was decommissioned in January 2023.[3]

History[edit]

Stellat 5, as it was originally known, was built by Alcatel Space on behalf of Stellat, a joint-venture between France Telecom (70%) and Europe*Star (30%), a subsidiary of Alcatel Space and Loral Space & Communications.[4] It was launched on 5 July 2002 at 23:22:00 UTC by an Ariane 5G launch vehicle from Centre Spatial Guyanais, KourouinFrench Guiana along with the Japanese satellite N-STAR c. It had a launch weight of 4050 kg. Victim of financial difficulties, France Telecom withdrew from space operations. In this move it sold Stellat to Eutelsat in July 2002, after the launch. Early September 2002, the satellite entered operational service. On 25 September 2002, Eutelsat completed the acquisition for a sum of 183,900,000 and renamed the satellite Atlantic Bird 3.[5]

Atlantic Bird 3 took on the role covered by the satellites Telecom 1 and Telecom 2C, operational between 1983 and 2002, in the historic French position of 5° of longitude West. In March 2012, EUTELSAT re-baptised its satellite fleet, and Atlantic Bird 3 was renamed Eutelsat 5 West A.

Technical characteristics[edit]

Atlantic Bird 3 was assembled by Alcatel Space, later Alcatel Alenia Space, on a Spacebus-3000B3 satellite bus. It was equipped with 35 Ku-band repeaters covering Europe, North Africa and the Middle East as well as 10 C-band repeaters. The Ku-band repeaters were 94 watts. The 10 C-band repeaters were 55 watts. During the eclipse of 19 April 2004 equinox, the satellite lost 6 of its total of 108 battery elements, reducing its performance.[2]

Transmissions[edit]

This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (March 2024)

French public analogue[edit]

Atlantic Bird 3 was launched to replace satellite Telecom 2C. It, therefore, took on the mission to continue the transmission of French national analog television channels to:

In France, Atlantic Bird 3 enabled Eutelsat to serve 1.6 million households (of nearly 23 million with televisions) who otherwise did not receive a signal at all, or who received a poor or unreliable signal ("snow", echos, interference, fog, repeated storm damage of mountain transmitters). No other free alternative existed. Transmissions were made in SÉCAM, the standard used in France.

Reception of analog satellite television could be achieved with relatively basic equipment:

Terrestrial analogue transmissions ceased in France on 29 November 2011 and the analogue satellite service reduced accordingly thereafter.

French public digital[edit]

With the arrival of digital terrestrial television in France, notably 18 or 19 free national channels attributed by the Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel (CSA), this satellite was chosen to feed terrestrial transmitters from March 2005. Householders could also use AB 3 to receive French digital TV: Télévision Numérique Terrestre (TNT):

Hybrid analog / digital demodulators have permitted continued access to free-to-air national channels during the transition. Since the end of 2011 and the termination of analogue broadcasting on Atlantic Bird 3, now requires a subscription to one of the two packages present on the satellite or a Fransat labelled terminal.

The various packages offering bouquets of digital channels are:

The terminals compatible with these bouquets employ MPEG-2orMPEG-4 (thus backwards compatible with 2) for encrypted broadcasts.

Regulatory obligations for the FRANSAT bouquet[edit]

In the 2007 bill "The future of television", French senators voted for an article requiring national digital TV broadcasters to make their free-to-air channels available to viewers via at least one satellite distributor or channel editor within a maximum period of three months from the date of enactment of the law confirmed by the vote of Deputies. This law passed through a fixed joint commission of 2 chambers, because the text was amended and adopted permanently. The Socialist Party (France) (PS) group that had challenged before the Constitutional Council was dismissed on 28 February 2008.

In a report published by the Secretariat of State for Strategic Studies,[6] it was planned to create a 2nd free satellite offer to over 1.5 million households already facing Atlantic Bird 3 without redirecting their existing satellite dish, in addition to the TNTSAT offer managed by the Canal+ Group. Announced on 8 February 2009 by EUTELSAT, this offer designated FRANSAT joined AB 3 in June 2009.

Chronology[edit]

Free to air channels on Eutelsat 5 West A[edit]

KC 110.971 GHz V 29950 7/8

  • Fransat Info HD
  • KB4 11.609 GHz V 5969 1/2

    KB1 11.471 GHz V 29950 3/4

    KB11 11.634 GHz H 29950 3/4

    KC3 11.054 GHz V 29950 7/8

    KB2 11.512 GHz V 29950 7/8

    KC9 11.059 GHz H 23700 3/4

  • Canal Algérie
  • TV Coran (Algérie)
  • TV Tamazight (Algérie)
  • KB3 11.555 GHz V 29950 7/8

    KC4 11.096 GHz V 29950 3/4

    KB4 11.591 GHz V 20000 2/3

    KA2 12.564 GHz V 29950 7/8

    [9]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "EUTE 5 WEST A (STELLAT 5)". N2YO.com. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  • ^ a b "Document de Référence 2014/2015" (PDF) (in French). Eutelsat. 19 October 2015. pp. 18, 171. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 September 2016.
  • ^ a b c d Rainbow, Jason (19 January 2023). "Eutelsat 5 West A successfully retired in graveyard orbit". Space News. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  • ^ "Stellat's first satellite is set for launch in 2002". FlightGlobal. 6 March 2001.
  • ^ "Eutelsat buys Stellat 5". Broadcast (magazine). 14 August 2002.
  • ^ Besson, Éric (October 2008). "Plan de développement de l'économie numérique France 2012" [Development plan for the digital economy France 2012] (PDF) (in French). p. 23. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2008.
  • ^ "3 chaînes passent en HD sur FRANSAT" (in French). telesatellite.com. 19 May 2015.
  • ^ "France 4 et France 5 désormais en HD sur Fransat". hdnumerique.com (in French). 9 September 2015.
  • ^ "Fréquences du satellite" (in French). KingOfSat. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  • External links[edit]

    Eutelsat satellites

    Post-2012 designations

    East

  • 7A
  • 7B
  • 9B
  • 10A
  • 16A
  • 16C
  • 21B
  • 25B
  • 31A
  • 33B
  • 33C
  • 33E
  • 36A
  • 36B
  • 36C
  • 48A
  • 48D
  • 70B
  • 70C
  • 172A
  • 172B
  • West

  • 5WB
  • 7WA
  • 8WB
  • 12WB
  • 36WA
  • 65WA
  • 113WA
  • 115WB
  • 117WA
  • 117WB
  • Hot Bird

  • 13C
  • 13E
  • 13F
  • 13G
  • Other

  • SESAT-2
  • Telstar 12
  • Pre-2012 designations

    Main brand

    Eutelsat I

  • ECS-2
  • ECS-3
  • ECS-4
  • ECS-5
  • Eutelsat II

  • F-2
  • F-3
  • F-4
  • F-5
  • W series

  • W2
  • W2A
  • W2M
  • W3
  • W3A
  • W3B
  • W3C
  • W3D
  • W4
  • W5
  • W5A
  • W6
  • W6A
  • W7
  • W48
  • W75
  • Hot Bird

  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 7A
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • Atlantic Bird

  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 4A
  • 7
  • Eurobird

  • 2
  • 2A
  • 3
  • 4
  • 4A
  • 9
  • 9A
  • 10
  • 16
  • Other

  • Eutelsat 3A
  • Eutelsat 3B
  • Eutelsat 3C
  • KA-SAT
  • SESAT-1
  • SESAT-2
  • Telstar 12
  • Orbital launches in 2002

    2003 →

    January

  • INSAT-3C
  • February

  • HESSI
  • Iridium 90, Iridium 91, Iridium 94, Iridium 95, Iridium 96
  • EchoStar VII
  • Intelsat 904
  • Kosmos 2387
  • March

  • STS-109
  • TDRS-9
  • GRACE
  • Progress M1-8
  • Shenzhou 3
  • JCSAT-8, Astra 3A
  • Intelsat 903
  • April

  • STS-110 (ITS S0)
  • NSS-7
  • Soyuz TM-34
  • May

  • Aqua
  • DirecTV-5
  • Feng Yun 1D, Hai Yang 1A
  • Ofek-5
  • Kosmos 2389
  • June

  • STS-111 (Leonardo MPLM)
  • Ekspress A1R
  • Galaxy 3C
  • Iridium 97, Iridium 98
  • NOAA-17
  • Progress M-46
  • July

  • Stellat 5, N-STAR c
  • Kosmos 2390, Kosmos 2391
  • Kosmos 2392
  • August

  • EchoStar VIII
  • Atlantic Bird 1, MSG-1
  • September

  • USERS, Kodama
  • METSAT
  • Tsinghua 2
  • Hispasat 1D
  • Progress M1-9
  • Nadezhda 7
  • October

  • Foton-M No.1
  • INTEGRAL
  • Zi Yuan 2B
  • Soyuz TMA-1
  • November

  • Astra 1K
  • AlSAT-1, Mozhayets 3, Rubin-3
  • December

  • Hot Bird 7, Stentor, MFD-A, MFD-B
  • ADEOS II, Kanta Kun, FedSat, µ-LabSat 1 (RITE 1, RITE 2)
  • NSS-6
  • TrailBlazer-2001 STA, Saudisat 1C, LatinSat A, LatinSat B, UniSat 2, Rubin 2
  • Kosmos 2393
  • Kosmos 2394, Kosmos 2395, Kosmos 2396
  • Shenzhou 4
  • Nimiq 2
  • Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
    Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).


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