VS26: Galileo successfully
expands his fleet with Arianespace
On Saturday, December 4, at
09:19 p.m. local time, a Soyuz launcher lifted off
from the CSG in Kourou, French Guiana, and
successfully orbited two satellites built by OHB
System: Galileo FOC-M9 (23-24), SAT 27-28, as a part
of Europe’s Galileo constellation.
These two satellites are the
179th and 180th launched on behalf of European
institutions. More precisely, it is the 61st mission
launched by Arianespace for ESA and the 23rd and
24th FOC satellites launched by Arianespace for the
European Commission.
“Congratulations Europe! With
this 11th launch for Galileo, the constellation is
now counting 28 satellites in orbit. Arianespace is
proud to guarantee a secure and autonomous access to
space with the deployment of Galileo, marking
another step towards European independence in
satellite navigation,” said Stéphane Israël, CEO of
Arianespace. “I would like to thank the European
Union, especially the European Commission, as well
as the European Space Agency, our direct customer
for this launch, for continuing to trust us with
their satellites.”
Operational since 2016, Galileo
is the global navigation satellite system that is
fully financed and owned by the European Union.
Under civilian control, it offers high-precision
positioning, navigation and timing services to more
than 2,3 billion users worldwide. Undertaken by a
European partnership, the European Commission
manages Galileo, with European Space Agency (ESA) as
the design authority overseeing its development,
procuring satellites and the ground segment, and the
European Union Agency for the Space Programme
(EUSPA) overseeing Galileo operations and service
provision.
The medium-lift Soyuz (produced
by Progress Space Rocket Center, part of the Russian
space agency Roscosmos) entered service from
Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana in October 2011,
bringing the industry’s longest-operating launcher
to the world’s most modern launch base. Soyuz is a
four-stage launcher, designed with extremely high
reliability requirements for its use in manned
missions. This flight will also mark 10 years of
Soyuz operations in French Guiana and its 26th
mission for the European Spaceport.
VS26 figures:
337th launch overall for the
Arianespace family of launchers (301st launch of the
family at CSG),
Galileo FOC-M9 are the 1063rd
and 1064th satellites launched by Arianespace,
Galileo FOC-M9 are the 490th
and 491st satellites launched on Soyuz by
Arianespace (66th and 67th at CSG).
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