Intelsat 901 (IS-901) was the first of nine new Intelsat satellites launched in June 2001 at 18° West, providing Ku-band spot beam coverage for Europe and C-band coverage for the Atlantic Ocean region. It is capable of selectable split uplink for Satellite news gathering (SNG), tailored for increased communications demands such as DTH and Internet.
Names | IS-901 |
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Mission type | Communications |
Operator | Intelsat |
COSPAR ID | 2001-024A |
SATCAT no. | 26824 |
Mission duration | 13 years (planned) 21 years, 24 days (elapsed) |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Intelsat 901 |
Spacecraft type | SSL 1300 |
Bus | SSL 1300HL |
Manufacturer | Space Systems/Loral |
Launch mass | 4,725 kg (10,417 lb) |
Power | 8.6 kW |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 9 June 2001, 06:45 UTC |
Rocket | Ariane 44L (VA141) |
Launch site | Centre Spatial Guyanais, ELA-2 |
Contractor | Arianespace |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric orbit |
Regime | Geostationary orbit |
Longitude | Current position: 27.5° West First orbital position: 67.5° West |
Transponders | |
Band | 56 transponders: 44 C-band 12 Ku-band |
Bandwidth | 36 and 72 MHz |
EIRP | C-band global beam 36 dBW C-band Hemi Beam 38 dBW C-band beam zone 38 dBW Ku-band 53 dBW Europe Spot 1 Ku-band 52 dBw Europe Spot 2 |
Docking with MEV-1 | |
Docking date | 25 February 2020, 07:15 UTC |
Undocking date | 2025 (planned) |
Time docked | 859 days (in progress) ~5 years(planned) |
Intelsat constellation ← Intelsat 806 |
Intelsat 901 was launched by an Ariane 4 from the Centre Spatial Guyanais in French Guiana on 9 June 2001 at 06:45 UTC.[1][2]
On 9 October 2015, SpaceNews reported that in April 2015, the Russian satellite Olymp-K had moved to within 10 km (6.2 mi) of Intelsat 901 and the nearby Intelsat 7, causing concerns of a safety-of-flight incident. Attempts by Intelsat to contact the Russian satellite operators were unsuccessful and no reason for the satellite's movement was given by the Russian government. The move sparked classified meetings within the Department of Defense and heightened suspicions that Olymp-K satellite was performing signals intelligence, or was possibly an anti-satellite weapon.[3]
On 9 October 2019, Mission Extension Vehicle-1 (MEV-1) launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a Proton-M launch vehicle. Its mission is to dock with Intelsat 901 and extend its operational lifespan by performing station-keeping for the aging satellite.[4] Before the docking of MEV-1 and Intelsat 901, ground controllers transitioned customers off of Intelsat 901 and moved the satellite to a graveyard orbit in December 2019 so that Intelsat 37e could use its orbital slot.
Docking occurred on 25 February 2020 at 07:15 UTC. MEV-1 rendezvoused with Intelsat 901, reached out with mechanical fingers, and grabbed the target craft using its liquid propellant engine as a grapple point to pull the two satellites together.[5] Over the next two months, Northrop Grumman and satellite prime contractor Space Systems/Loral performed tests on the satellites' systems before using MEV-1 to lower Intelsat 901 back to the geosynchronous arc to the 27.5° West (332.5° East) orbital latitude, where it will remain for five years.[6]
On 17 April 2020, Intelsat and Northrop Grumman announced that Intelsat 901 had officially returned to operational service on 2 April 2020 at its new orbital longitude. The satellite replaces Intelsat 907, a 17-year-old satellite now four years past its design life. After five years, MEV-1 will move Intelsat 901 back to a final graveyard orbit and release it before moving to another potential client.[7][8]
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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← 2000 · Orbital launches in 2001 · 2002 → | |
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Shenzhou 2 | Türksat 2A | Progress M1-5 | USA-156 | Sicral 1 · Skynet 4F | STS-98 (Destiny) | Odin | Progress M-44 | USA-157 | STS-102 (Leonardo MPLM) | Eurobird 1 · BSAT-2a | XM-2 | Ekran-M No.18L | 2001 Mars Odyssey | GSAT-1 | STS-100 (Raffaello MPLM) | Soyuz TM-32 | XM-1 | PAS-10 | USA-158 | Progress M1-6 | Kosmos 2377 | Kosmos 2378 | Intelsat 901 | Astra 2C | ICO F2 | MAP | STS-104 (Quest) | Artemis · BSAT-2b | Molniya-3K No.11 | GOES 12 | Koronas-F | USA-159 | Genesis | STS-105 (Leonardo MPLM · Simplesat) | Progress M-45 | Kosmos 2379 | VEP-2 · LRE | Intelsat 902 | USA-160 | Progress M-SO1 (Pirs) | OrbView-4 · QuickTOMS · SBD · Odyssey | Atlantic Bird 2 | Starshine 3 · PICOSat · PCSat · SAPPHIRE | USA-161 | Globus No.14L | USA-162 | QuickBird-2 | Soyuz TM-33 | TES · PROBA · BIRD | Molniya-3 No.64 | Progress M1-7 (Kolibri 2000) | DirecTV-4S | Kosmos 2380 · Kosmos 2381 · Kosmos 2382 | STS-108 (Raffaello MPLM · Starshine 2 | Jason-1 · TIMED | Meteor-3M #1 · Kompass · Badr-B · Maroc-Tubsat · Reflektor | Kosmos 2383 | Kosmos 2384 · Kosmos 2385 · Kosmos 2386 · Gonets-D1 No.10 · Gonets-D1 No.11 · Gonets-D1 No.12 | |
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. |