Agila-1 or Mabuhay was launched on March 20, 1987, under the name Palapa B2-P in Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. It was originally under Indonesian company, PT Pasifik Satelit Nusantara until it was acquired by Philippine company, Mabuhay Satellite Corporation which is under PLDT in 1996. Upon its acquisition by Mabuhay, it became the first Philippine satellite through acquisition while in orbit. Palapa B2-P was later renamed to "Agila-1", the local name for the Philippine eagle. The satellite's operation ended in January 1998 and was deorbited.[2][3][4][5]
Names | Palapa B2P (1987-1996) Agila-1 (1996-1998) |
---|---|
Mission type | Communications |
Operator | PT Pasifik Satelit Nusantara (1987-1996) Mabuhay (1996-1998) |
COSPAR ID | 1987-029A ![]() |
SATCAT no. | S17706 |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | March 20, 1987, 22:22 (1987-03-20UTC22:22Z) UTC[1] |
Rocket | Delta-3920 PAM-D |
Launch site | Cape Canaveral LC-17 |
End of mission | |
Last contact | January 1998 |
Philippine space program | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
Government institutions |
| |
Programs |
| |
In development |
| |
Operational |
| |
Previous | ||
Facilities |
| |
Related organizations |
|
← 1986 · Orbital launches in 1987 · 1988 → | |
---|---|
Meteor-2 No.17 | Kosmos 1811 | Kosmos 1812 | Kosmos 1813 | Progress 27 | Kosmos 1814 | Kosmos 1815 | Molniya-3 No.42 | Kosmos 1816 | Kosmos 1817 | Kosmos 1818 | Ginga | Soyuz TM-2 | Kosmos 1819 | USA-21 | Kosmos 1820 | Kosmos 1821 | Momo 1 | Kosmos 1822 | Kosmos 1823 | Kosmos 1824 | GOES 7 | Progress 28 | Kosmos 1825 | Kosmos 1826 | Kosmos 1827 · Kosmos 1828 · Kosmos 1829 · Kosmos 1830 · Kosmos 1831 · Kosmos 1832 | Kosmos 1833 | Gran' No.31L | Palapa B2P | SROSS-A | FLTSATCOM-6 | Kvant-1 | Kosmos 1834 | Kosmos 1835 | Kosmos 1836 | Progress 29 | Kosmos 1837 | Kosmos 1838 · Kosmos 1839 · Kosmos 1840 | Kosmos 1841 | Kosmos 1842 | Kosmos 1843 | Gorizont No.23L | Kosmos 1844 | Kosmos 1845 | USA-22 · LIPS-3 · USA-23 · USA-24 · USA-25 | Polyus | Progress 30 | Kosmos 1846 | Kosmos 1847 | Kosmos 1848 | Kosmos 1849 | Kosmos 1850 | Kosmos 1851 | Kosmos 1852 · Kosmos 1853 · Kosmos 1854 · Kosmos 1855 · Kosmos 1856 · Kosmos 1857 · Kosmos 1858 · Kosmos 1859 | Resurs-F1 No.105 | Kosmos 1860 | USA-26 | Kosmos 1861 | Kosmos 1862 | Kosmos 1863 | Kosmos 1864 | Kosmos 1865 | Kosmos 1866 | Kosmos 1867 | Kosmos 1868 | Kosmos 1869 | Soyuz TM-3 | Kosmos 1870 | Kosmos 1871 | Progress 31 | Fanhui Shi Weixing 10 | Meteor-2 No.21 | Kosmos 1872 | Kiku No.5 | Kosmos 1873 | Kosmos 1874 | Ekran No.29L | Kosmos 1875 · Kosmos 1876 · Kosmos 1877 · Kosmos 1878 · Kosmos 1879 · Kosmos 1880 | Fanhui Shi Weixing I-01 | Kosmos 1881 | Kosmos 1882 | Aussat A3 · ECS-4 | Kosmos 1883 · Kosmos 1884 · Kosmos 1885 | Transit-O 27 · Transit-O 29 | Kosmos 1886 | Progress 32 | Kosmos 1887 | Kosmos 1888 | Kosmos 1889 | Kosmos 1890 | Kosmos 1891 | Kosmos 1892 | Kosmos 1893 | USA-27 | Kosmos 1894 | Kosmos 1895 | Kosmos 1896 | Progress 33 | TV-SAT 1 | Kosmos 1897 | USA-28 | Kosmos 1898 | Kosmos 1899 | Gran' No.32L | Kosmos 1900 | Kosmos 1901 | Kosmos 1902 | Soyuz TM-4 | Kosmos 1903 | Kosmos 1904 | Kosmos 1905 | Kosmos 1906 | Ekran-M No.13L | Kosmos 1907 | |
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). |