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S'13
12-28-2003, 09:18 AM
Israel launches second commercial satellite
Sat December 27, 2003 04:52 PM ET

JERUSALEM (*******) - Israel launched its second commercial communications satellite from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Saturday.
Live television pictures broadcast on Israeli television showed the lift-off at 2130 GMT of the Russian Soyuz-Fregat launch vehicle which carried the AMOS 2 satellite into space.

The operation was conducted by Starsem, a European-Russian space launching venture set up in 1996.

AMOS 1, launched in 1996 by Arianespace in French Guiana, was Israel's first communications satellite.

It provides broadcasting services for Israeli and foreign customers in the Middle East and Europe, serving Israeli satellite television company YES as well as U.S. broadcaster HBO in Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Romania and the Czech Republic.

AMOS 2 will expand capacity and coverage, providing access to the east coast of the United States and offering broadband services in addition to direct-to-home television distribution.


And from www.israeli-weapons.com


The AMOS-class is a family of geo-synchronous communication satellites, developed, launched and controlled by MBT.
Amos 2 represents the second generation of communications satellites built by Israel Aircraft Industries
(IAI). Its predecessor, Amos 1, was launched in 1996. Amos 2, which weighs 1.4 tons, will cover the entire Middle East and Europe, and will be able to transmit higher-powered broadcasts than the one-ton Amos 1. The new satellite, like its predecessor, will be positioned 36,000 kilometers above the earth, and it will lie close to Amos 1, so that the two can share a single space antenna.

The Spacecom-owned Amos 2 will provide communications services to television networks in Israel, Europe and the United States. According to Spacecom CEO David Pollack, the company has already signed contracts for about 70 percent of the satellite's broadcast capacity - a noteworthy achievement when compared to Amos 1, which did not have a single customer at the time it was launched. Amos 2's
customers will include the Israeli government, the Yes satellite television company, the Israel Broadcasting Authority, Gilat Satellite Networks, Germany's RTL television station and the American cable television station HBO. The latter will broadcast to six countries in Europe via Amos 2.

Spacecom, a joint venture between IAI, Eurocom, Mer Services Group and General Satellite Services Co., invested some $130 million in Amos 2, including $70 million to build the satellite, $35 million for the launch and $25 million for insurance, Pollack said.

Once the launch has been successfully completed, he added, Spacecom intends to start raising the
$160 million needed to build Amos 3. The goal is to launch Amos 3, which will weigh two tons,
by 2007, so that it will ready to replace Amos 1, which is due to cease operations in 2008.

Amos 2 was originally supposed to be launched by the French launcher Ariane 5, as Amos 1 was.
However, the French sold the launch slot to another customer, due to what it claimed were
delays in the satellite's production. After IAI threatened a lawsuit, Ariane arranged the alternative launch on the Soyuz, which is made by a company jointly owned by Ariane.


Nine months after its original launching date, Amos 2, the second Israeli telecommunications satellite, is still on the ground, hoping for a launch on December 27 from Baikonur, the renowned former Soviet imperial launching pad in Kazakhstan.
On December 27, God, Arianne, and the old Soyuz launcher willing, several hundred guests will watch a live broadcast of the launch on a huge screen, somewhere in Tel Aviv. The shareholders (Eurocom Communications, Mer Group subsidiary Mer Services Group, Meir Amit group subsidiary General Satellite Services Co. (GSSC), and IAI) will make speeches, drink toasts, and Amos 2 will be on its way. The excitement, however, will not be as great as when Amos 1 was launched, when all of Israel held its breath.

Amos 2 covers the US, which Amos 1 didn't. In professional jargon, this is called an Atlantic bridge. All the customers who positioned antennas to receive Amos 1 will receive service from Amos 2. The number of transponders is 50% more than the Amos 1. Amos 2 has 22 active 36-Mhz segments, while Amos 1 has 14. Not only can Amos 2 serve more transponders, but the transponders are more powerful: 76 watts per transponder, compared with 33 watts per transponder with Amos 1. That has enabled us to expand our European coverage very significantly, to the Ural mountains in the east, London in the west, and the Balkans in the south. We also have better coverage of the Persian Gulf countries.

Argyll
12-28-2003, 09:50 AM
Commercial Sattelite..........yeah right!! ;)

S'13
12-28-2003, 09:57 AM
Commercial Sattelite..........yeah right!! ;)

rofl rofl rofl rofl

Better be careful, your on to us... :D

Argyll
12-28-2003, 12:46 PM
rofl

I'm surprised no one else has jumped onto this one guys!!

Javehn
12-28-2003, 02:16 PM
No one jumped on this ? Can i , can i ??
Oh , man , those Israelies ! How they dare to do it ??
What , they trying to occupate space (the final frontier . This are the voyagers of the ... ) now ?? Unbellievable , those occupants just don't have enough . Stop the space aparthehid ! Remove all Israeli sattelites back to 1967 borders !Why is the U.N assembly sleeping about this ??

oldsoak
12-28-2003, 04:53 PM
dunno. I'd be suprised if the Israelis would let a dedicated military satellite be launched from Baikonor when they could use the secure facilities of the US. Having said that you can use a commercial satellite to relay military comms just as securely - just encrypt the data before relay.

IDFM203
12-28-2003, 05:07 PM
dunno. I'd be suprised if the Israelis would let a dedicated military satellite be launched from Baikonor when they could use the secure facilities of the US..……or when they can use their own facilities ;)

Listen folks, this is a commercial Israeli satellite and it is produced by private business firms

Israel already has their own produced military satellites (http://www.israeli-weapons.com/weapons/space/ofeq-5/OFEQ-5.html) that they have launched with their own produced launcher’s (http://www.israeli-weapons.com/weapons/space/shavit/Shavit.html)

Shalom :D