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Constellation of geostationary communications satellites From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ViaSat-3 is a planned global constellation of three geostationary Ka-band communications satellites, the first of which was launched in 2023.[1] Operated by Viasat, Inc., the satellites are intended to provide broadband connectivity with speeds of 100-plus megabits per second to homes, business and enterprise internet users, commercial, government and business aircraft, as well as government and defense markets, maritime and oceanic enterprises in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia-Pacific.[1]
The satellites were first announced in 2015. In February 2016, Viasat announced a partnership with Boeing Satellite Systems.[1] For each of the three ViaSat-3 class satellites, Viasat will build the satellite payload, integrate the payload into the Boeing-provided payload module. Boeing will provide the scalable 702 satellite platform, system integration and test, launch vehicle integration and mission operations services.[2] Each ViaSat-3 satellite payload is being manufactured at Viasat's own manufacturing facility in Tempe, Arizona, using modular structures from Boeing Satellite Systems in El Segundo, California.[3] The satellites are projected to have a total network capacity over 1 terabit per second.[4]
The ViaSat-3 constellation consists of three separate satellites, each designed to provide coverage to select global regions: ViaSat-3 F1 (Americas) will cover the Americas; ViaSat-3 F2 (EMEA) will cover Europe, the Middle East and Africa; and ViaSat-3 F3 (APAC) will cover the Asia-Pacific regions.[3]
Due to technical difficulties, the nomenclature of the satellites was changed as F1 will be moved to F2's intended coverage area of EMEA.[7]
Viasat has three launch contracts, one for each ViaSat-3 class satellite. In 2016, the company announced plans to launch the first satellite with Arianespace on an Ariane 6 rocket. In 2018, Viasat announced that the second one will be launched with United Launch Alliance on an Atlas V, and the third one with SpaceX on the Falcon Heavy.[8][9][10]
The ViaSat-3 F1 (Americas) and ViaSat-3 F2 (EMEA) satellites at one time were expected to launch about six months apart starting in 2021, with the ViaSat-3 F3 (APAC) satellite projected to launch in the second half of 2022.[11] However, in February, 2021, ViaSat's CEO announced that the company did not expect to launch the first satellite until early 2022. It would then take several months for the satellite to be in full service, because of necessary testing.[12]
By 2023, delays to the inaugural Ariane 6 launch prompted Viasat to cancel their contract with Arianespace and seek bids from other companies to launch the ViaSat-3 APAC satellite.[13]
ViaSat-3 F1 launched on 1 May 2023 aboard a Falcon Heavy rocket, which successfully placed it into a near-geosynchronous orbit in the early hours of 1 May at an altitude of approximately 34,600 kilometers. Deployment of the antenna did not take place in the normal way and the satellite's performance was severely affected.[14][15] Viasat triggered a $420 million claim, a space insurance underwriter described the situation to CNBC as a “market changing event” for the sector.[16] Viasat suffered its biggest one-day loss in share price following the news.[16] In February 2024, Viasat announced that the crippled satellite is expected to enter commercial service in the second quarter of 2024 at less than ten percent of its 1 terabit per second capacity, and that a $421 million insurance claim had been filed.[17]
The ViaSat-3 F2 satellite is currently scheduled to launch in the first half of 2025 on an Atlas V rocket.[18] The ViaSat-3 F3 satellite is expected to launch in late 2024 on a to-be-determined commercial launch vehicle.[13]
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