The final five: Ariane 5’s march to retirement begins with dual passenger launch

by Chris Gebhardt

Arianespace, ArianeGroup, and the European Space Agency (ESA) have launched their second flight of the year and the first for the veteran Ariane 5 rocket, which begins its trek toward retirement with the first of its five final planned missions. The mission lifted off from Kourou in French Guiana at 5:50 PM EDT (21:50 UTC) on June 22, partway into the 100-minute-long launch window.

The two payload passengers are MEASAT-3d and GSAT-24, with a total combined mass of 10,849 kg. They were delivered into a targeted orbit of 250 x 35,786 km inclined 6° to the equator over the course of a 25-minute powered flight ascent to orbit.

Overall, preparations for this mission began years ago with the satellites’ contracts for construction and the overall launch contract agreement with ArianeGroup.

The various components of the rocket, including the sections of the solid rocket boosters, the cryogenic core stage, and the cryogenic upper stage were all transported to French Guiana where assembly of the launcher for flight began on May 13, 2022.

After initial assembly in the Launcher Integration Building, the partial Ariane 5 stack was rolled on May 18 to the Final Integration Building.

MEASAT-3d, meanwhile, arrived in French Guiana on May 13, followed by the other passenger, GSAT-24, on May 19.

Fueling operations for MEASAT-3d were then conducted on May 30, followed on June 1 by those for GSAT-24.

MEASAT-3d was then integrated on top of the Ariane 5’s SYLDA launch adapter on June 8, followed by fairing integration onto the SYLDA the following day.

GSAT-24 was then integrated directly onto the Ariane 5’s launch vehicle adapter on June 13, followed the next day by the integration of MEASAT-3d under the payload fairing and on top of the SYLDA -– with SYLDA cocooning GSAT-24 inside of it for launch.

Ariane 5 on the launch pad. (Credit: Chris Gebhardt (photo) and Nathan Barker (edit) for NSF)

The Ariane 5 launcher can achieve dual passenger launches to geostationary transfer orbit via the use of the SYLDA, where the lower passenger rides inside of the adapter while the upper passenger rides on top of it.

The upper passenger is deployed first, followed by SYLDA separation, and then by the second spacecraft during the deployment sequence of a dual-passenger mission.

With the rocket fully integrated, a full-up launch countdown and mission simulation were performed on June 16 followed by final launch readiness reviews and arming of the launch vehicle’s ordinance on June 17.

The Ariane 5 then rolled out from its Final Integration Building on June 21 and out to its ELA-3 launch pad that day.

Overall, this launch campaign represents the first of the final five flights of the Ariane 5 rocket as it prepares to hand off its lineage to the upcoming successor: Ariane 6.

Including the MEASAT-3d/GSAT-24 flight, Ariane 5 has four dual passenger launches to geostationary transfer orbit left on its manifest followed by what is intended to be its final grand finale mission to send the European Space Agency’s JUICE mission on an interplanetary trek to Jupiter.

Today’s flight was the rocket’s 113th flight overall and — when compared to past flight numbers — was the second heaviest total payload mass injected into geostationary transfer orbit by the launcher, barely coming in under the teh VA255 mission’s total injected mass of 10,865 kg (a world record) — just 2 kg more than today’s total mass of 10,863 kg when the satellites and hardware injected into the orbit are all accounted for.

The heaviest payload ever launched by the Ariane 5 was the 20,293 kg Georges Lemaitre Automated Transfer Vehicle to the International Space Station in July 2014.

MEASAT-3d

MEASAT-3d is a 5,648 kg telecommunication satellite built by Airbus Defense and Space around the Eurostar E3000 satellite bus. 

It will be used as part of the Korean Augmentation Satellite System, called KASS, to improve air traffic management in South Korea while also focusing coverage over the larger Malaysian region throughout an 18-year lifetime.

The satellite will significantly enhance broadband speeds of up to 100Mbps in areas with limited or no terrestrial networks throughout Malaysia while providing redundancy to and additional capacity for video in HD, 4K, and ultimately 8K in the Asia-Pacific region.

After being dropped off in geostationary transfer orbit, the satellite will deploy its two solar arrays to begin generating 12 kW of power and then use its onboard engine to raise its orbit and place itself in its intended 91.5° East geostationary orbital slot.

Overall, the satellite carries C- and Ku-band transponders for direct-to-home services as well as a Ka-band payload with multiple user spot beams for high-speed broadband communication.

Additionally, the first Q/V band payload for the Asia-Pacific region was launched on this mission and will help study the effects of high rainfall on communication channels to aid the design of the next generation of satellites that need to contend with this reality in the region.

The overall MEASAT program traces its inception to 1993 when the then Malaysian Prime Minister called for an end to the government’s monopoly on communications. MEASAT, which stands for Malaysia East Asia Satellite, then entered service with the launch of the first satellite in January 1996.

Since then, MEASAT-1, -2, -3, -3a, and -3b have followed, with -3d’s launch marking the sixth satellite in the overall MEASAT program.

MEASAT-3c was not its own satellite and was intended as a Ku- and S-band lease on the now-canceled Jabiru-1 satellite from Australia.

GSAT-24

This satellite marked the final sale of a payload slot for the Ariane 5 as confirmed by Arianespace earlier this year.

The first of its kind “demand-driven” mission for NewSpace India Limited, GSAT-24 is a 4,181 kg satellite built on the I–3K satellite bus for India.

GSAT-24 integrated on top of the Ariane 5’s cryogenic upper stage in the Final Assembly Building. Payload fairing encapsulation followed minutes later. (Credit: ESA/CNES/Arianespace)

Manufactured by ISRO, the Indian Space Research Organisation, the satellite carries a 15-year on-orbit life and will enable high-quality television, telecommunications, and broadcast services to meet overall Indian customer needs and demands.

While built and owned by ISRO, NewSpace India Limited has leased the rights for operations and use of the entire satellite.

It will operate primarily in the Ku-band through 24 bands.

Overall, this marks the 25th Indian satellite launched by Arianespace and the 11th of the GSAT series launched by the company in a relationship that stretches back 42 years to 1981 with the launch of the APPLE satellite on Ariane 1.

(Lead image: Ariane 5 lifts off to begin the MEASAT-3d/GSAT-24 launch. Credit: Arianespace)

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