April 2018: DSN-1/Superbird-8 Hylas 4
April 2018: DSN-1/Superbird-8 Hylas 4
April 2018: DSN-1/Superbird-8 Hylas 4
April 2018
VA242
DSN-1/Superbird-8
HYLAS 4
HYLAS 4
> FURTHER INFORMATION As for DSN-1, it is an X-Band Defense Communications Satellite-1 in association with the
Program to Upgrade and Operate X-Band Satellite Communications Function, for which the DSN
Ariane 5 ECA launch vehicle Corporation, a subsidiary of SKY Perfect JSAT, has concluded a program contract with Japan's
Page 6 Ministry of Defense.
The launch will be from Ariane Launch Complex No. 3 (ELA 3) in Kourou, French
Guiana.
MISSION DURATION
The nominal duration of the mission (from liftoff to separation of the satellites) is:
33 minutes, 56 seconds.
PAYLOAD CONFIGURATION
Upper payload (CUH): DSN-1/Superbird-8
Mass at liftoff: 5,348 kg.
Lower payload (CUB): HYLAS 4
Mass at liftoff: 4,050 kg.
Long version of the payload fairing
SYLDA (SYstème de Lancement Double Ariane)
CUSTOMER Avanti
PRIME CONTRACTOR Orbital ATK
MISSION Broadband and connectivity services
MASS 4,050 kg. at liftoff
STABILIZATION 3 axis
DIMENSIONS 5.18 m. x 3.33 m. x 3.10 m.
PLATFORM GEOStarTM-3
PAYLOAD Ka-band High-Throughput Satellite (HTS) with 53 Operational User Beams and 4 Operational Gateway Beams
ONBOARD POWER 8.0 kW (end of life)
DESIGN LIFE 15 years
ORBITAL POSITION 33.5° West Longitude
COVERAGE AREA Africa and Europe
Fairing
(RUAG Space): 17 m. 780 metric tons
Mass: 2.4 t. (total mass at liftoff)
DSN-1/Superbird-8
(SKY Perfect JSAT)
Mass: 5,348 kg.
PA - Payload adaptor (2)
HYLAS 4 (RUAG Space or Airbus)
(Avanti) Mass: approx. 140 kg. each
Mass: 4,050 kg.
SYLDA - Internal structure
7 versions (Height: 4.9 to 6.4 m.)
Vehicle Equipment Bay
Mass: 500 to 530 kg.
Height: 1.13 m.
Mass: 970 kg.
ESC-A - Cryogenic upper stage
Height: 4.71 m.
HM-7B engine Mass: 19 t.
Thrust: 67 kN (in vacuum)
945 sec. of propulsion
H174
Vulcain 2 engine
Thrust: 1,390 kN (in vacuum)
540 sec. of propulsion MPS - Solid Rocket Motor (SRM)
Average thrust: 5,060 kN
Maximum thrust: 7,080 kN (in vacuum)
130 sec. of propulsion
13,000 kN at liftoff
(at T+7.3 sec.)
TIME EVENT
- 11 h 23 min Start of final countdown
- 10 h 33 min Check of electrical systems
- 04 h 38 min Start of filling of EPC with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen
- 03 h 28 min Start of filling of ESC-A with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen
- 03 h 18 min Chilldown of Vulcain main stage engine
- 01 h 15 min Check of connections between launcher and the telemetry, tracking and command
systems
- 7 min “All systems go” report, allowing start of synchronized sequence
- 4 min Tanks pressurized for flight
-1 min Switch to onboard power mode
- 05 s Opening command for the cryogenic arms
- 04 s Onboard systems take over
At T-4 seconds, the onboard computer takes over control of final engine startup and liftoff operations. It:
Starts the ignition sequence for the Vulcain main stage engine (T-0).
Checks engine operation (from T+4.5 to T+6.9 sec).
Commands ignition for the solid boosters at T+7.05 sec for liftoff at T+7.3 seconds.
Any shutdown of the synchronized sequence after T-7 minutes automatically places the launcher back in its
T-7-minute configuration.
Since the outset, Arianespace has signed over 530 launch contracts and launched 570-plus satellites. More than half of the
commercial satellites now in service around the globe were launched by Arianespace. The company posted sales of
approximately 1.3 billion euros in 2017.
The company’s activities are worldwide, with the headquarters in Evry, France (near Paris); the Guiana Space Center in French
Guiana, where the Ariane, Soyuz and Vega launch pads are located; and offices in Washington, D.C., Tokyo and Singapore.
Arianespace offers launch services to satellite operators from around the world, including private companies and government
agencies. These services call on three launch vehicles:
The Ariane 5 heavy-lift launcher, operated from the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana.
The Soyuz medium-lift launcher, currently in operation at the Guiana Space Center and the Baikonur Cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan.
The Vega light-lift launcher, also operated from the Guiana Space Center.
Building on its complete family of launchers, Arianespace has won over half of the commercial launch contracts up for bid
worldwide in the past two years. Arianespace now has a backlog of more than 700 satellites to be launched.