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1 See also  





2 References  





3 External links  














ViaSat-1






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ViaSat-1

Names

VS-1, VIASAT-IOM

Mission type

Communication

Operator

Viasat Inc. / Telesat

COSPAR ID

2011-059A Edit this at Wikidata

SATCAT no.

37843

Mission duration

15 years (planned)
12 years, 8 months, 22 days (elasped)

Spacecraft properties

Bus

LS-1300

Manufacturer

Space Systems/Loral

Launch mass

6,740 kg (14,860 lb)

Dry mass

3,650 kg (8,050 lb)

Start of mission

Launch date

19 October 2011, 18:48:58 (2011-10-19UTC18:48:58Z) UTC

Rocket

Proton-M/Briz-M

Launch site

Baikonur 200/39

Contractor

International Launch Services

Orbital parameters

Reference system

Geocentric

Regime

Geostationary

Longitude

115.1° west

Perigee altitude

35,783 kilometres (22,235 mi)[1]

Apogee altitude

35,802 kilometres (22,246 mi)[1]

Inclination

0.00 degrees[1]

Period

1436.10 minutes[1]

Epoch

25 January 2015, 04:39:48 UTC[1]

Transponders

Band

56 Ka-band

Coverage area

Contiguous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Canada

 

ViaSat-1 is a high throughput communications satellite owned by Viasat Inc. and Telesat Canada.[2][3] Launched October 19, 2011 aboard a Proton rocket, it held the Guinness record for the world's highest capacity communications satellite with a total capacity in excess of 140 Gbit/s, more than all the satellites covering North America combined, at the time of its launch.[4]

ViaSat-1 is capable of two-way communications with small dish antennas at higher speeds and a lower cost-per-bit than any satellite before.[5]

The satellite is positioned at 115.1 degrees West longitude geostationary orbit point, with 72 Ka-band spot beams; 63 over the U.S. (Eastern and Western states, Alaska and Hawaii), and nine over Canada.

The Canadian beams are owned by satellite operator Telesat and are used for the Xplornet broadband service to consumers in rural Canada. The US beams provide fast Internet access called Exede, Viasat's satellite Internet service.[6]

ViaSat-1 is part of a new satellite system architecture created by Viasat Inc. The objective is to create a better satellite broadband user experience,[7] making satellite competitive with DSL and wireless broadband alternatives for the first time.[8]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "VIASAT 1 Satellite details 2011-059A NORAD 37843". N2YO. 25 January 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
  • ^ ViaSat-1 Launch Is Milestone for Isle of Man
  • ^ The Isle of Man Government launch ViaSat-1 the first satellite to use an Isle of Man licensed orbital filing[permanent dead link]
  • ^ "Highest-capacity communications satellite". December 2012. Retrieved December 14, 2012.
  • ^ Amos, Jonathan (October 20, 2011). "Viasat broadband 'super-satellite' launches". BBC News. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  • ^ "Exede: The satellite broadband service you've been waiting for?". CNet. January 2012. Retrieved April 20, 2013.
  • ^ "A Very Different Kind of Dish Network". Fortune. October 2011. Retrieved November 28, 2011.
  • ^ "Exede service comes in first place in FCC report". TeleCompetitor. February 2013. Retrieved April 20, 2013.
  • External links[edit]

    Orbital launches in 2011

    2012 →

    January

  • USA-224
  • Kounotori 2
  • Progress M-09M (Kedr)
  • February

  • USA-225
  • Johannes Kepler ATV
  • STS-133 (Leonardo)
  • Kosmos 2471
  • March

  • USA-226
  • USA-227
  • April

  • Compass-IGSO3
  • USA-229
  • Resourcesat-2, YouthSat, X-Sat
  • Yahsat 1A, New Dawn
  • Progress M-10M
  • May

  • USA-230
  • STS-134 (AMS-02, ELC-3)
  • Telstar 14R
  • ST-2, GSAT-8 / INSAT-4G
  • June

  • SAC-D
  • Rasad 1
  • ChinaSat 10
  • Progress M-11M
  • Kosmos 2472
  • USA-231
  • July

  • STS-135 (Raffaello, PSSC-2)
  • Tianlian I-02
  • Globalstar M083, Globalstar M088, Globalstar M091, Globalstar M085, Globalstar M081, Globalstar M089
  • GSAT-12
  • SES-3, KazSat-2
  • USA-232
  • Spektr-R
  • Compass-IGSO4
  • Shijian XI-02
  • August

  • Astra 1N, BSAT-3c/JCSAT-110R
  • Paksat-1R
  • Hai Yang 2A
  • Sich 2, NigeriaSat-2, NigeriaSat-X, RASAT, EduSAT, AprizeSat-5, AprizeSat-6, BPA-2
  • Ekspress-AM4
  • Shijian XI-04
  • Progress M-12M
  • September

  • Zhongxing-1A
  • Kosmos 2473
  • Arabsat 5C, SES-2
  • IGS Optical 4
  • Atlantic Bird 7
  • TacSat-4
  • Tiangong-1
  • QuetzSat 1
  • October

  • Intelsat 18
  • Eutelsat 16A
  • Megha-Tropiques, SRMSAT, VesselSat-1, Jugnu
  • ViaSat-1
  • Galileo-IOV FM1 , Galileo-IOV FM2
  • NPP, AubieSat-1, DICE-1, DICE-2, M-Cubed, RAX-2
  • Progress M-13M
  • Shenzhou 8
  • November

  • Fobos-Grunt , Yinghuo-1
  • Yaogan 12 , Tian Xun-1
  • Soyuz TMA-22
  • Shiyan Weixing 4 , Chuang Xin 1C
  • AsiaSat 7
  • Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity)
  • Kosmos 2478
  • Yaogan 13
  • December

  • Amos-5, Luch 5A
  • IGS Radar 3
  • Pléiades-HR 1A, SSOT, ELISA 1, ELISA 2, ELISA 3, ELISA 4
  • NigComSat-1R
  • Soyuz TMA-03M
  • Ziyuan-1C
  • Meridian 5
  • Globalstar M080, Globalstar M082, Globalstar M084, Globalstar M086, Globalstar M090, Globalstar M092
  • 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).


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=ViaSat-1&oldid=1220791121"

    Categories: 
    Communications satellites in geostationary orbit
    Satellite Internet access
    High throughput satellites
    Spacecraft launched in 2011
    First artificial satellites of a country
    Communications in the Isle of Man
    2011 in the Isle of Man
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    This page was last edited on 25 April 2024, at 22:55 (UTC).

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