THAICOM 6 Mission logo of THAICOM 6
Mission type Communication Operator Thaicom COSPAR ID 2014-002A SATCAT no. 39500 Mission duration 15 years
Bus GEOStar-2 Manufacturer Orbital Sciences Corporation Launch mass 3,325 kg (7,330 lb) Power 3.7 kW (5.0 hp)[ 2]
Launch date January 6, 2014, 22:06 (2014-01-06UTC22:06Z ) UTC Rocket Falcon 9 v1.1 Launch site Cape Canaveral SLC-40 Contractor SpaceX
Reference system Geocentric Regime Geostationary Longitude 78.5° East Perigee altitude 35,789 kilometres (22,238 mi)[ 3] Apogee altitude 35,795 kilometres (22,242 mi)[ 3] Inclination 0.07 degrees[ 3] Period 1436.07 minutes[ 3] Epoch 25 January 2015, 02:13:56 UTC[ 3]
Band 18 C band 8 Ku band Frequency 72, 36 MHz C band 54, 36 MHz Ku band Coverage area Southeast Asia, Africa & Americas
THAICOM 6 (Thai: ไทยคม 6 ) is a Thai satellite of the Thaicom series, operated by Thaicom Public Company Limited, a subsidiary of INTOUCH headquartered in Bangkok, Thailand. THAICOM 6 is colocated with Thaicom 5 at 78.5 degrees East, in geostationary orbit. The total cost for the satellite is US$160 million .
Overview
THAICOM 6 is a 3-axis stabilized spacecraft, carrying 18 active C-band transponders and 8 active Ku-band transponders. The Ku-band transponders are both addressed as well as beam-switched to broadband. THAICOM 6 provides communication service to Southeast Asia, Africa and Madagascar[ 4] with its primary role being DTH service for Thailand.[ 2]
Launch
THAICOM 6 launching on a Falcon 9 v1.1 vehicle.
The spacecraft was launched on 6 January 2014, by SpaceX on a Falcon 9 v1.1 launch vehicle. The payload was delivered by SpaceX to a 90,000 kilometers (56,000 mi)-apogee supersynchronous elliptical transfer orbit that will later be reduced by the satellite builder Orbital Sciences Corporation to an approximately 35,800 kilometers (22,200 mi) circular geostationary orbit. The supersynchronous transfer orbit enables an inclination plane change with a lower expenditure of propellant by the satellite's kick motor.[ 5] `
This launch was SpaceX's second transport of a payload to a Geostationary transfer orbit.[ 6] [ 7] Both the SES-8 SpaceX launch before this one and THAICOM 6 utilized a supersynchronous transfer orbit, but Thaicom 6 was at a somewhat greater apogee than that used for SES-8.[ 5]
The Falcon 9 upper stage used to launch THAICOM 6 was left in a decaying elliptical low-Earth orbit which decayed over time and, on 28 May 2014, re-entered the atmosphere and burned up.[ 8]
See also
Thaicom 4
Thaicom 5
Thaicom 7
Thaicom 8
Thaicom 9A
List of Falcon 9 launches
References
External links
Thaicom satellites
Thaicom 1
Thaicom 2
Thaicom 3
Thaicom 4
Thaicom 5
AsiaSat 7 / Thaicom 6A
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Thaicom 8
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