Tuesday, November 8, 2011

ESA Soyuz: Six Astrium satellites on the same flight

The launching of six satellites in a single flight has been made possible thanks to the payload support structure developed at the Astrium site in Barajas, near Madrid.

Astrium is prime contractor for all six satellites to be launched in mid-December by the second Soyuz launcher to lift off from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana.

The Pleiades 1 Very High Resolution (VHR) Earth observation satellite recently left Astrium's site in Toulouse for Kourou.

The four satellites of the Elisa constellation and the Chilean satellite SSOT arrived in Kourou on October 21.

This will be the first time that six satellites developed by Astrium are launched simultaneously.

Pleiades 1 is the first of two very high-resolution satellites manufactured by Astrium in Toulouse for CNES (the French Space Agency).

It will be joined in space by its twin, Pleiades 2, in approximately one year's time.

Once in orbit, each satellite will provide the French and Spanish defence ministries, and civilian users, with Very High Resolution (VHR) optical satellite imagery coupled with major operational advances.

They offer incomparable image acquisition capacity, remarkable agility (rapid area targeting) for multiple target modes (stereo, mosaics, corridor or target) and excellent operational flexibility.

At an altitude of 700 km, the Pleiades constellation will be capable, after processing, to provide 50-cm resolution products with a swath width of 20 km.

The four satellites for the ELISA demonstrator are developed jointly by Astrium Satellites and Thales Systemes Aeroportes for the French ministry of defence procurement agency (DGA) and CNES.

LISA will demonstrate spaceborne capabilities to map and characterise radar emissions from all around the globe. The four satellites are also based on the Myriade platform.


SSOT (Sistema Satelital para la Observacion de la Tierra) is the most recent space-based Earth observation system exported by Astrium, the world's number one exporter in the field.

Ordered by Chile in late 2008, SSOT is based on two product families: the Myriade platform developed in cooperation with the CNES, and Naomi optical instruments, made of silicon carbide and used with success by Astrium for many other optical imagery missions.


The launching of six satellites in a single flight has been made possible thanks to the payload support structure developed at the Astrium site in Barajas, near Madrid.

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