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nitpicker

(7,153 posts)
Tue May 16, 2017, 05:54 AM May 2017

Inmarsat rides SpaceX Falcon into orbit

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-39929168

Inmarsat rides SpaceX Falcon into orbit

By Jonathan Amos
BBC Science Correspondent

9 hours ago

From the section Science & Environment

Inmarsat, the UK's biggest space company, has boosted its global broadband network with the launch of a fourth high-frequency satellite. The I-5 F4, which will service the voice, video and data needs of remote and on-the-move customers, was taken into orbit by a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket. It is the first time the London company has used the American launch provider.

The rocket and its payload lifted away from Florida's Kennedy Space Center at 19:21 local time (00:21 BST, Tuesday). The I-5 F4 was ejected from the upper-stage of the Falcon some 32 minutes later. At six tonnes, the satellite was on the limit of the rocket's performance, meaning SpaceX had no spare propellant to follow its usual practice of landing the vehicle's first-stage back on Earth after the mission. Th booster was allowed instead to fall down uncontrolled over the Atlantic.

Inmarsat has not made it clear precisely where or how it will use the new satellite. The firm already has three Ka-band spacecraft delivering its Global Xpress broadband service to customers worldwide. These clients include ships, oil and gas platforms, armed forces and the media - users who need telecommunications away from a fixed line.

CEO Rupert Pearce told BBC News that the new "bird" would act in the first instance as a quick-response spare to fill in behind the primary satellites, should one of them unexpectedly experience a failure. But it was inevitable, he said, that with ever-increasing demand for capacity, the I-5 F4 would ultimately be deployed to exploit new market opportunities.
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