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Eutelsat 16B

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Eutelsat 16B
NamesHot Bird 4 (1998–2005)
Atlantic Bird 4 (2006–2009)
Eurobird 16 (2009–2012)
Eutelsat 16B (2012–2015)

Leased capacity:
Nilesat 103 (2005–2006)
Mission typeCommunications (direct-to-home)
OperatorEUTELSAT
COSPAR ID1998-013A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.25237
Mission duration17 years (achieved)
Spacecraft properties
BusEurostar-2000+
ManufacturerBritish Aerospace and
Matra Marconi Space
Launch mass2900 kg
Dry mass1310 kg
Power5500 watts
Start of mission
Launch date27 February 1998, 22:38:00 UTC
RocketAriane 42P H10-3
Launch siteCentre Spatial Guyanais, ELA-2
ContractorArianespace
End of mission
DisposalGraveyard orbit
Deactivated2015
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric orbit
RegimeGeostationary orbit
Longitude13° East (1998–2005)
7° West (2005–2009)
16° East (2009–2015) [1]
SlotHot Bird (1998–2005)
Transponders
Band20 Ku-band
Coverage areaAfrica, Middle East, Asia

Eutelsat 16B, formerly known as Hot Bird 4, Nilesat 103, Atlantic Bird 4, and Eurobird 16, is a communications satellite owned and operated by Eutelsat. The satellite was retired in 2015 and was moved into a graveyard orbit above the geostationary belt.

Spacecraft

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Hot Bird 4 was a geostationary communications spacecraft of the European Eutelsat consortium. With a constellation of 5 satellites, the Hot Bird family at 13° East formed one of the largest broadcasting systems in the world. By fourth-quarter 1998, the system was delivering over 320 analogue and digital television channels, as well as radio and multimedia services, to more than 70 million homes connected to a cable network or equipped for satellite (direct-to-home) reception. The Hot Bird satellites provided full coverage of Europe and also took in parts of Africa and Asia, including the entire Middle East. In addition to the basic Widebeam and Superbeam, Hot Bird 3 and Hot Bird 4 were equipped with a Steerable Beam which could be oriented anywhere visible from 13° East, either northern or southern hemispheres. Hot Bird 4 and Hot Bird 5 were the first in the world to be equipped with SKYPLEX for on-board multiplexing of digital signals into a single DVB stream which could be received in the downlink by standard IRDs.[2]

Launch

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The satellite was launched on 27 February 1998 at 22:38:00 UTC, from the Centre Spatial Guyanais in Kourou by an Ariane 42P launcher under the name of Hot Bird 4, under Eutelsat's Hot Bird brand.[3]

Orbit

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The satellite was positioned in geostationary orbit at a longitude of 13° East, co-located with the rest of the Hot Bird constellation. Following the launches of Hot Bird 7A and Hot Bird 8 in 2006, the satellite was moved to 7° West under the Atlantic Bird brand, and renamed Atlantic Bird 4. During this time, some of the satellite's capacity was leased to Egyptian operator Nilesat, who marketed the satellite as Nilesat 103.

Mission

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Nilesat used the satellite, alongside Nilesat 101 and Nilesat 102 which were located in the same orbital slot, to provide direct-to-home digital TV channels, data transmission, turbo internet, and multicasting applications to more than 15 million viewers in the North African and Middle East region.

In April 2009, the satellite was repositioned to 16° East and renamed Eurobird 16 as part of Eutelsat's Eurobird brand; it was replaced at 7° West by Atlantic Bird 4A. In March 2012, the satellite was renamed Eutelsat 16B when the company unified its brand name.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "EUTE 16B (HB 4) Satellite details 1998-013A NORAD 25237". N2YO.com. 1 June 2016. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  2. ^ "Display: Hot Bird-4 1998-013A". nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov. NASA. 10 February 2021. Retrieved 17 March 2021. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ a b "Hotbird 2, 3, 4, 5 / Eurobird 2, 9→4, 10, 16 / Eutelsat W48, W75 / Atlantic Bird 4 / Eutelsat 4B, 16B, 25A / Arabsat 2D → Badr 2 / Nilesat 103 / ABS 1B". Gunter's Space Page. 3 August 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
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