AMC-15 is an American communications satellite. Owned by SES Americom, AMC-15 was designed to be placed in geostationary orbit, following launch on a Proton-M / Briz-M space vehicle.
| Names | GE-15 |
|---|---|
| Mission type | Communications |
| Operator | SES Americom / EchoStar |
| COSPAR ID | 2004-041A |
| SATCAT no. | 28446 |
| Mission duration | 15 years (planned) 17 years, 9 months, 22 days (elapsed) |
| Spacecraft properties | |
| Spacecraft | AMC-15 |
| Spacecraft type | Lockheed Martin A2100[1] |
| Bus | A2100AXS |
| Manufacturer | Lockheed Martin |
| Launch mass | 4,021 kg (8,865 lb) |
| Start of mission | |
| Launch date | 14 October 2004, 21:23:00 UTC |
| Rocket | Proton-M / Briz-M |
| Launch site | Baikonur, Site 200/39 |
| Contractor | Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center |
| Entered service | December 2004 |
| Orbital parameters | |
| Reference system | Geocentric orbit[2] |
| Regime | Geostationary orbit |
| Longitude | 105° West |
| Transponders | |
| Band | 36 transponders: 24 Ku-band at 36 MHz 12 Ka-band |
| Coverage area | Canada, United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico |
SES Americom constellation | |
Built by Lockheed Martin and based on the A2100AXS satellite bus, AMC-15 is located at 105° West longitude for EchoStar. AMC-15 has 24 Ku-band and 12 Ka-band transponders covering United States (including Hawaii and Alaska), part of Canada and Mexico. Leased to Echostar Satellite Services.[2]
It was launched atop a Proton-M / Briz-M launch vehicle at 21:23:00 UTC on 14 October 2004, from Site 200/39 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. AMC-15 is completely leased to EchoStar Satellite Services.[1]
Satellites operated by SES S.A. | |
|---|---|
| SES fleet | |
| AMC fleet | |
| NSS fleet | |
| Astra fleet | |
| Third parties |
|
← 2003 · Orbital launches in 2004 · 2005 → | |
|---|---|
Estrela do Sul 1 | Progress M1-11 | AMC-10 | USA-176 | Molniya-1 No.93 | Rosetta (Philae) | MBSat | Eutelsat W3A | USA-177 | Globus No.17L | Superbird-A2 | Tansuo 1 · Naxing 1 | Soyuz TMA-4 | Gravity Probe B | Ekspress AM-11 | DirecTV-7S | AMC-11 | Formosat-2 | Progress M-49 | Kosmos 2405 | Kosmos 2406 | Intelsat 10-02 | USA-178 | Telstar 18 | Demeter · AprizeSat-1 · AprizeSat-2 · Saudisat-2 · SaudiComsat-1 · SaudiComsat-2 · UniSat-3 · AMSAT-Echo | Aura | Anik F2 | Kosmos 2407 | Tan Ce 2 | MESSENGER | Amazonas 1 | Progress M-50 | FSW-19 | USA-179 | Ofek-6 | Shijian 6A · Shijian 6B | GSAT-3 / EDUSAT | Kosmos 2408 · Kosmos 2409 | Kosmos 2410 | FSW-20 | Soyuz TMA-5 | AMC-15 | Feng Yun 2C | Ekspress AM-1 | Zi Yuan 2C | USA-180 | Tansuo 2 | Swift | AMC-16 | Helios IIA · Nanosat 01 · Essaim 1 · Essaim 2 · Essaim 3 · Essaim 4 · Parasol | HLVOLSDP · Sparkie · Ralphie | Progress M-51 | Sich-1M · MK-1TS | Kosmos 2411 · Kosmos 2412 · Kosmos 2413 | |
Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Crewed flights are indicated in underline. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in brackets. |