FLTSATCOM Satellite

FLTSATCOM (also FLTSAT) is a satellite communication system controlled by the U.S. Space Force (formally SPAWARSYSCOM) which was used for UHF radio communications between ships, submarines, airplanes and ground stations of the Navy.[1]

Most of the transponders on these satellites were simple repeaters with no authentication or control over what they retransmitted.

FLTSATCOM

Altogether eight satellites were launched from 1978 to 1989 by Atlas-Centaur rockets into geostationary orbit. The system became operational in 1981. The satellites were manufactured by TRW. The solar array of each satellite had a span of over 13.2 m. A special characteristic was a UHF transmit antenna reflector 4.9 m in diameter. Each satellite had 12 transponders, which worked in the UHF range from 240 - 400 megahertz. Additionally FLTSATCOM 7 and 8 included an experimental EHF transponder built by Lincoln Laboratory intended to test the MILSTAR ground terminals. The first seven satellites each had a launch mass of 1884 kg and the remaining two were 2310 kg, with the additional mass due to the EHF payload module.

The fifth satellite reached geosynchronous orbit, but had severely limited utility due to damage to the solar arrays and antennas. The failure was attributed to explosive delamination of the fiberglass honeycomb fairing during flight. The inside wall of the fairing extensively damaged one of the solar arrays, and bent the transmit antenna mast which prevented the antenna from deploying fully.

Flight 7 was launched out of sequence after a launch failure of a Delta mission carrying the GOES-G weather satellite grounded the entire US launch fleet weeks prior to the scheduled launch of F-6. By the time the Delta mishap investigation concluded there was no risk to the Atlas-Centaur system, F-7 was ready to launch and the system managers elected to swap missions to avoid delaying EHF system testing.

Flight 6 was destroyed in a launch failure. The Atlas-Centaur was launched on March 26, 1987 into a heavy overcast with light rain. 51 seconds into the flight, the Atlas was struck by lightning and the resulting EMP changed a value in the guidance computer's core memory, causing the rocket to yaw and break apart from aerodynamic stress. As a result of this mishap, NASA and the Air Force re-emphasised and clarified the original weather guidelines developed after the Apollo 12 on-stand lightning strike for all future launches.

In the late 1990s, FLTSATCOM satellites were gradually replaced by the UFO satellites. FLTSAT flights 7 and 8 continue to provide UHF communications.

Presently, FLTSATCOM 7 and FLTSATCOM 8 have been used for repeating UHF Satcom transmissions by unauthorized radio users particularly in Brazil, including criminals, illegal loggers, truckers and individuals located in remote areas. This has been met with limited law enforcement action.[2]

Launches

Satellite Launch Rocket Note
FLTSATCOM 1 February 9, 1978 Atlas-SLV3D Centaur-D1AR Success
FLTSATCOM 2 May 4, 1979 Atlas-SLV3D Centaur-D1AR Success
FLTSATCOM 3 January 18, 1980 Atlas-SLV3D Centaur-D1AR Success
FLTSATCOM 4 31. October 31, 1980 Atlas-SLV3D Centaur-D1AR Success
FLTSATCOM 5 August 6, 1981 Atlas-SLV3D Centaur-D1AR Damaged upon launch
FLTSATCOM 7 December 5, 1986 Atlas-G Centaur-D1AR Success
FLTSATCOM 6 March 26, 1987 Atlas-G Centaur-D1AR Lightning strike destroyed the rocket
FLTSATCOM 8 September 25, 1989 Atlas-G Centaur-D1AR Success

See also

References

  1. "Army, Navy satellite operations to consolidate under Space Force". 23 June 2021.
  2. Soares, Marcelo (2009-04-20). "The Great Brazilian Sat-Hack Crackdown". Wired. Retrieved 2018-09-03.
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