Intelsat III F-4 was a geostationary communications satellite built by TRW, it was owned by Intelsat, a company currently based in Luxembourg. The satellite had an estimated useful life of 5 years.
Mission type | Communications |
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Operator | Intelsat |
COSPAR ID | 1969-045A[1] |
SATCAT no. | 03947[2] |
Mission duration | 5 years design life |
Spacecraft properties | |
Manufacturer | TRW |
Launch mass | 647 kilograms (1,426 lb) |
BOL mass | 151 kilograms (333 lb) |
Dry mass | 293 kilograms (646 lb) |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 22 May 1969, 02:00 (1969-05-22UTC02Z) UTC |
Rocket | Delta M |
Launch site | Cape Canaveral LC-17A |
Contractor | NASA |
End of mission | |
Disposal | Decommissioned |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Geostationary |
Eccentricity | 0.00471 |
Perigee altitude | 35,276 kilometres (21,919 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 35,670 kilometres (22,160 mi) |
Inclination | 0.5 degrees |
Period | 1,418.9 minutes |
Epoch | 22 May 1969 |
Intelsat III |
The Intelsat III F-4 was part of the Intelsat III series which consisted of eight satellites, which were used for retransmission of global commercial telecommunications, including live TV.
The satellite was stabilized by rotation with a minus antenna structure (its antenna was 34 inches high). It had a hydrazine propulsion system with four propellers and four tanks. Passive thermal control. With solar cells producing 178W peak, nine Ahr NiCd batteries. The load consisted of two transponders that used 12 watt TWTA amplifiers for multiple access, 1500 audio circuits or four TV channels. The Intelsat III F-1 was disabled due to launch vehicle failure.
The satellite was successfully launched into space on May 22, 1969, by means of a Delta M vehicle from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, United States. It had a launch mass of 293 kg.[3]
← 1968 · Orbital launches in 1969 · 1970 → | |
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Venera 5 | Venera 6 | Kosmos 263 | Soyuz 4 | Soyuz 5 | 7K-L1 No.13L | OSO-5 | OPS 7585 | Kosmos 264 | US-A No.5 | Isis 1 | Meteor-1 No.11 | OPS 3890 · OPS 2644 | Intelsat III F-3 | Kosmos 265 | OPS 0757 | Luna E-8 No.201 | 7K-L1S No.3 | Mariner 6 | Kosmos 266 | ESSA-9 | Kosmos 267 | Apollo 9 | OPS 4248 | Kosmos 268 | Kosmos 269 | Kosmos 270 | Kosmos 271 | Kosmos 272 | OV1-17 · OV1-18 · OV1-19 · Orbiscal 2 | OPS 3722 · OPS 2285 | Kosmos 273 | Kosmos 274 | Meteor-1 No.12 | 2M No.521 | Mariner 7 | Kosmos 275 | 2M No.522 | Kosmos 276 | Kosmos 277 | Kosmos 278 | Molniya-1 No.16 | OPS 3148 | Nimbus 3 · SECOR 13 | Kosmos 279 | OPS 5310 | Kosmos 280 | OPS 1101 · OPS 1721 | Kosmos 281 | Apollo 10 | Kosmos 282 | Intelsat III F-4 | OPS 6909 · OPS 6911 · ERS-29 · ERS-26 · OV5-9 | Kosmos 283 | Kosmos 284 | Kosmos 285 | OPS 1077 | OGO-6 | Luna E-8-5 No.402 | Kosmos 286 | Explorer 41 | Kosmos 287 | Kosmos 288 | Biosatellite 3 | STV-2 | 7K-L1S No.5 | Kosmos 289 | Luna 15 | Apollo 11 | Kosmos 290 | Molniya-1 No.18 | OPS 1127 | DS-P1-Yu No.23 | OPS 3654 | Intelsat III F-5 | OPS 8285 | Kosmos 291 | Zond 7 | OSO-6 · PAC-1 | ATS-5 | Kosmos 292 | Kosmos 293 | Kosmos 294 | Kosmos 295 | OPS 7807 | Pioneer E · ERS-32 | Kosmos 296 | Kosmos 297 | Kosmos 298 | Kosmos 299 | Unnamed | OPS 3531 · OPS 4710 | Kosmos 300 | Kosmos 301 | OPS 7613 · NRL PL-161 · NRL PL-162 · NRL PL-163 · NRL PL-164 · NRL PL-176 · Timation 2 · Tempsat 2 · SOICAL Cone · SOICAL Cylinder | ESRO-1B | Meteor-1 No.15 | Soyuz 6 | Soyuz 7 | Soyuz 8 | Interkosmos 1 | Kosmos 302 | Kosmos 303 | Kosmos 304 | Kosmos 305 | Kosmos 306 | Kosmos 307 | OPS 8455 | Kosmos 308 | Azur | Kosmos 309 | Apollo 12 | Kosmos 310 | Skynet 1A | Kosmos 311 | Kosmos 312 | 7K-L1e No.1 | Kosmos 313 | OPS 6617 | Kosmos 314 | Kosmos 315 | Kosmos 316 | Kosmos 317 | Interkosmos 2 | Unnamed | |
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. |
Intelsat Corporation | |
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ex-PanAmSat | |
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