Galaxy 4R was a communications satellite operated by PanAmSat from 2000 to 2006, and by Intelsat from 2006 to 2009. It spent most of its operational life at an orbital location of 99° W, a slot once occupied by the Galaxy IV, which suffered a failure in 1998. G4R was launched on April 18, 2000, with an Ariane launch vehicle, and covered North America with twenty-four transponders each on the C- and Ku bands.[1] The satellite is currently at 76.8°W, inclined.
Mission type | Communications |
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Operator | PanAmSat (2000–2006) Intelsat (2006–2009) |
COSPAR ID | 2000-020A ![]() |
SATCAT no. | 26298 |
Mission duration | 15 years |
Spacecraft properties | |
Bus | HS-601HP |
Manufacturer | Hughes |
Launch mass | 3,716 kilograms (8,192 lb) |
BOL mass | 2,511 kilograms (5,536 lb) |
Dry mass | 1,895 kilograms (4,178 lb) |
Power | 7,800 watts |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 19 April 2000, 00:29 (2000-04-19UTC00:29Z) UTC |
Rocket | Ariane 42L |
Launch site | Kourou ELA-2 |
Contractor | Arianespace |
End of mission | |
Disposal | Decommissioned |
Deactivated | April 2009 (2009-05) |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Geostationary |
Longitude | 73° west (2000) 99° west (2000–2006) 76.85° west (2006–2009) |
Transponders | |
Band | 28 C-band 28 Ku-band 4 of each reserved as backups |
Coverage area | North America |
Users included Warner Brothers, National Public Radio, Public Radio International, Buena Vista Television Distribution, FOX, and Televisa. The satellite was also utilized for satellite internet services through DirecPC.
Much of the Ku side was occupied by the HITS service, which re-distributes programming found on other satellites to cable providers.
Designed for an operational lifespan of 15 years, Galaxy 4R suffered a propulsion system failure in 2003 and was replaced by Galaxy 16 on August 14, 2006.[2] It was moved to 76.85 degrees west after being replaced and its orbit was allowed to become more inclined in order to save station-keeping propellant. The satellite was decommissioned in April 2009 and moved to a graveyard orbit.
Intelsat Corporation | |
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| |
Intelsat I, II, III | |
Intelsat IV | |
Intelsat V | |
Intelsat VI | |
Intelsat 7-10 | |
ex-PanAmSat | |
Recent Intelsat | |
Galaxy (Intelsat Americas) | |
Other |
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← 1999 · Orbital launches in 2000 · 2001 → | |
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USA-148 | Galaxy 10R | Feng Huo 1 | JAWSAT · FalconSAT-1 · ASUSat-1 · OCSE · OPAL (STENSAT · MEMS 1A · MEMS 1B · MASAT · Thelma · Louise) | Progress M1-1 | Kosmos 2369 | Hispasat 1C | Globalstar 60 · Globalstar 62 · Globlastar 63 · Globalstar 64 | Gruzovoy Maket · IRDT-1 | ASTRO-E | STS-99 | Garuda 1 | Superbird-B2 | Ekspress A2 | MTI | ICO F1 | Dumsat | INSAT-3B · AsiaStar | IMAGE | Soyuz TM-30 | SESAT 1 | Galaxy 4R | Progress M1-2 | GOES 11 | Kosmos 2370 | USA-149 | USA-150 | SimSat 1 · SimSat 2 | STS-101 | Eutelsat W4 | Gorizont No.45L | TSX-5 | Ekspress A3 | Feng Yun 2B · Nadezhda 6 · Tsinghua 1 · SNAP-1 | TDRS-8 | Sirius FM-1 | Kosmos 2371 | Zvezda | EchoStar VI | CHAMP · MITA · Rubin-1 | USA-151 | Samba · Salsa | Sindri (MEMS 2A · MEMS 2B) | PAS-9 | Progress M1-3 | Rumba · Tango | Brazilsat B4 · Nilesat 102 | USA-152 | DM-F3 | Globus No.16L | Zi Yuan 2 | Sirius FM-2 | Eutelsat W1 | STS-106 | Astra 2B | GE-7 | NOAA-16 | Kosmos 2372 | Megsat 1 · Unisat 1 · Saudisat 1A · Saudisat 1B · TiungSAT-1 | Kosmos 2373 | GE-1A | N-SAT-110 | HETE-2 | STS-92 (ITS Z1 · PMA-3) | Kosmos 2374 · Kosmos 2375 · Kosmos 2376 | Progress M-43 | USA-153 | Thuraya 1 | GE-6 | Europe*Star 1 | Beidou 1A | Soyuz TM-31 | USA-154 | PAS-1R · AMSAT-P3D · STRV 1C · STRV 1D | Progress M1-4 | QuickBird-1 | EO-1 · SAC-C · Munin | Anik F1 | Sirius FM-3 | STS-97 (ITS P6) | EROS A | USA-155 | Astra 2D · GE-8 · LDREX | Beidou 1B | Gonets-D1 No.7 · Gonets-D1 No.8 · Gonets-D1 No.9 · Strela-3 No.125 · Strela-3 No.126 · Strela-3 No.127 | |
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. |
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