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Product Name: Galaxy XI
Product Description
Galaxy XI opens a new era in communications satellites, as the first in
Hughes Space and Communications Company's powerhouse HS 702 series. Hughes built
the satellite for PanAmSat Corporation to expand video and telecommunications
services to North America and Brazil. The satellite was successfully launched on
an Ariane rocket from Kourou, French
Guiana, on Dec. 21, 1999.
In October 2000, The Boeing Company acquired three units within Hughes
Electronics Corporation: Hughes Space and Communications Company, Hughes
Electron Dynamics, and Spectrolab, Inc., in addition to Hughes Electronics'
interest in HRL, the company's primary research laboratory. The four are now
part of Boeing's newest subsidiary, Boeing Satellite Systems, Inc.
The 20-watt C-band transponders will be used primarily for cable television
customers. The Ku-band payload offers two power levels: 140 watts for video
distribution, and 75 watts for data networks and other general communications
services. This gives Galaxy XI a total payload of 64 active transponders, for
much greater capacity than the largest satellites now in its fleet.
The Boeing 702 design offers satellite operators a giant in size, performance
and cost efficiency. The model was introduced in October 1995, as an evolution
of its popular, proven Hughes 601 and Hughes 601HP (high-power) spacecraft. The
body-stabilized Boeing 702 can deliver payloads exceeding 90 active
transponders, in any communications frequencies that customers request. Power
levels start at 10 kilowatts and climb to 15 kilowatts in the "max
power" configuration. The spacecraft is adaptable to medium and
geosynchronous earth orbits.
Standard on the Boeing 702 is the advanced xenon ion propulsion system (XIPS)
that Hughes pioneered. XIPS is 10 times more efficient than conventional liquid
bipropellant fuel systems. Four 25-cm thrusters provide economical attitude
control, needing only 5 kg of fuel per year ? a fraction of what bipropellant or
arcjet systems consume. Customers can apply the weight savings to increase the
revenue-generating payload, to prolong service life or to use to a less
expensive launch vehicle, when cost is based on satellite weight.
Stowed (left); In Orbit (right)
As a new feature on the Boeing 702, angled reflector panels along both sides
of the solar wings form a shallow trough and concentrate the sun's rays on the
solar cells. These high-efficiency, dual-junction gallium arsenide cells supply
twice the power of traditional silicon cells.
Separating the bus and payload thermal environments and substantially
enlarging the heat radiators achieves a cooler, more stable thermal environment
for both bus and payload. This increases unit reliability. The deployable
radiators use flexible heat pipes, which increase the packageable radiator area.
PanAmSat is the world's leading commercial provider of satellite-based
communications services. The company operates a global network of 20 satellites
supported by PanAmSat professionals on five continents. These resources enable
PanAmSat to provide video and telecommunications services to hundreds of
customers worldwide.
Boeing Satellite Systems is the leading manufacturer of commercial
communications satellites, and is also a major supplier of spacecraft and
equipment to the U.S. government, and builder of weather satellites for the
United States and Japan.
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