BSAT-3a


BSAT-3a, is a geostationary communications satellite operated by B-SAT which was designed and manufactured by Lockheed Martin on the A2100 platform. It is stationed on the 110° East orbital slot along its companion BSAT-3b and BSAT-3c from where they provide redundant high definition direct television broadcasting across Japan.

Satellite description

BSAT-3a was designed and manufactured by Lockheed Martin on the A2100 satellite bus for B-SAT. It had a launch mass of, a dry mass of, and a 13-year design life. As most satellites based on the A2100 platform, it uses a LEROS-1C LAE for orbit raising.
It measured when stowed for launch. Its dual wing solar panels can generate 2.8 kW of power at the end of its design life, and span when fully deployed.
It has a single Ku band payload with 8 active transponders plus four spares with a TWTA output power of 130 Watts.

History

On April 27, 2005, Lockheed Martin announced that it had been granted by B-SAT an authorization to proceed to the construction of its first third generation broadcasting satellite, BSAT-3a. On May 18, 2005, both companies announced the signature of the definitive contract for the satellite. It would be based on the A2100 platform, sport eight 130Watts Ku band transponders, have a design life of 13 years and have a 1.8 kW power generation capability. It was expected launch in the second quarter of 2007 to be co-located at the 110° East orbital position. On June 15, 2005, Arianespace announced that it had been awarded the launch contract for BSAT-3a.
On June 19, 2007 Lockheed announced that it was poised to deliver BSAT-3a on the third quarter of 2007, along another Japanese spacecraft, JCSAT-11. BSAT-3a was the sixth broadcasting satellite procured by B-SAT.
On August 10, 2007, Lockheed announced that BSAT-3a was mated to the launcher and ready for its ride to orbit. It launched at 23:44 UTC, of August 14, 2007 aboard an Ariane 5 ECA from Guiana Space Center ELA-3 launch pad. It rode on the lower berth under the SYLDA along Spaceway-3. The first signals from the satellite were received one hour later, at 00:46 UTC August 15, 2007. It also marked the 33rd launch of the A2100 platform.
It was entered into service on October 1, 2007 after successfully passing the on-orbit deployment and checkout phase.