Third Advanced EHF Satellite Launched
Sept.
18, 2013
The U.S. Air Force successfully
launched the third Advanced Extremely High Frequency
(AEHF-3) communication satellite at
4:10 a.m. EDT,
Sept. 18, from Space Launch
Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. The
satellite was carried to orbit aboard a United Launch
Alliance (ULA) Atlas V launch vehicle.
The satellite successfully
separated from the launch vehicle approximately 51 minutes
after liftoff and will now undergo approximately 110 days of
orbit-raising operations, followed by approximately 60 days
of on-orbit testing.
"We are proud of the tremendous
efforts by the combined ULA, Lockheed Martin, the SMC and
45th Space Wing military, government civilians and
contractors team in making this launch such a success," said
Col.
Rodney Miller, Chief,
Protected SATCOM Division, Military Satellite Communications
(MILSATCOM) Systems Directorate. "The satellite is healthy
and operating as expected. We have now turned our
attention to maneuvering it into its final orbital location
over the next several months and look forward to many years
of service in providing critical communication capabilities
to our warfighters around the world."
AEHF is a joint service satellite
communications system that will provide survivable, global,
secure, protected, and jam-resistant communications for
high-priority military ground, sea and air assets to the US,
Canada,
Great Britain, and
the Netherlands. This system will enhance
interoperability between our joint warfighters across the
globe. The AEHF system is the follow-on to the Milstar
system, augmenting, improving and expanding the Department
of Defense's Military Satellite Communications (MILSATCOM)
architecture.
AEHF-3 was procured from Lockheed
Martin Space Systems Company by the MILSATCOM Systems
Directorate, part of the Air Force's Space and Missile
Systems Center. The MILSATCOM Systems Directorate plans,
acquires and sustains space-based global communications in
support of the president, secretary of defense and combat
forces. The entire MILSATCOM enterprise consists of
satellites, terminals and control stations and provides
communications for more than 16,000 air, land and sea
platforms.
Air Force Space Command's Space
and Missile Systems Center, located at
Los Angeles Air Force Base, Calif., is the
U.S. Air Force's center of acquisition excellence for
acquiring and developing military space systems, including
the Global Positioning System, military satellite
communications, defense meteorological satellites, space
launch and range systems, the Air Force satellite control
network, space based infrared surveillance systems and space
situational awareness capabilities.