AMC-9

AMC-9
Mission type Communications
Operator SES S.A.
COSPAR ID 2003-024A
SATCAT no. 27820
Website AMC-9 Website
Mission duration Planned: 15 years
Final: 14 years, 10 days
Spacecraft properties
Bus Spacebus-3000B3[1]
Manufacturer Alcatel Space[1]
Launch mass 4,100 kg (9,000 lb)[2]
Dry mass 2,000 kg (4,400 lb)[1]
Start of mission
Launch date 6 June 2003, 22:15 (2003-06-06UTC22:15) UTC
Rocket Proton-M
Launch site Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 200
Contractor International Launch Services
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Geostationary
Longitude 83° West
Transponders
Band 24 × C band
24 × Ku band
Frequency 36 MHz
Coverage area Canada
Caribbean
United States

AMC-9 (formerly GE-12) is a commercial broadcast communications satellite owned by SES World Skies, part of SES S.A. Launched on 6 June 2003, from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, on the 300th launch of a Proton family rocket,[3] AMC-9 is a hybrid C-band/Ku-band satellite located at 83° West, covering the United States and Mexico. It is owned and operated by SES World Skies,[4] formerly SES Americom.

On 17 June 2017 at approximately 07:10 UTC,[1] AMC-9 experienced an anomaly on-orbit, the operator lost control and contact with the satellite, and it appeared to begin breaking apart.[5] SES claims that it re-established contact with the satellite on 1 July 2017, that it poses no risk of a collision with other active satellites, and that by the end of the day following the anomaly, most of AMC-9's traffic had been transferred to other SES satellites.[6][7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Anz-Meador, Phillip; Shoots, Debi, eds. (February 2018). "Satellite Box Score" (PDF). Orbital Debris Quarterly News. NASA. 22 (1): 12. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  2. "AMC-9". Gunter's Space Page.
  3. "AMC-9 and ILS Proton". International Launch Services.
  4. "AMC-9". SES S.A. Archived from the original on 20 July 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  5. Berger, Eric (2 July 2017). "A satellite may be falling apart in geostationary orbit". Ars Technica.
  6. SES: AMC-9 has “no risk of a collision with other active satellites” Space News 21 June 2017. Accessed 31 July 2017
  7. SES re-establishes communications with AMC-9; pieces of satellite appear to have broken off Space Intel Report 2 July 2017. Accessed 31 July 2017


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