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Daily news


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Arianespace’s thirteenth
flight for OneWeb successfully deployed 34
additional satellites
Flight VS27, was the
first Arianespace’s mission of 2022 and the 340th
launch overall for the Arianespace family of
launchers Ariane, Soyuz and Vega. Performed on
Thursday, February 10 at precisely 03:09 p.m. local
time at Guiana Space Center (06:09 p.m. UTC), this
mission orbited 34 OneWeb satellites bringing the
size of the fleet in orbit to 428.
“2022 begins with the
successful orbiting of 34 satellites for OneWeb.
Congratulations to all the teams who made this
thirteenth launch for OneWeb a success,” said
Stéphane Israël, CEO of Arianespace. “More OneWeb
missions are coming soon this year and will enable
the start of the constellation’s global services. We
are proud to contribute to the OneWeb project, which
will increase connectivity on earth while treating
space as a natural resource and being committed to
protecting it.”
The OneWeb constellation will
deliver high-speed, low-latency connectivity to a
wide range of customer sectors, including aviation,
maritime, backhaul services, and for governments,
emergency response services and more. Central to its
purpose, OneWeb seeks to bring connectivity to every
place where fiber cannot reach, and thereby bridge
the digital divide. Once deployed, the OneWeb
constellation will work with user terminals that are
capable of offering 3G, LTE, 5G and Wi-Fi coverage,
providing high-speed access globally – by air, sea
and land.
The satellite prime contractor
is OneWeb Satellites, a joint venture of OneWeb and
Airbus Defence and Space. The OneWeb satellites are
the 531st to 564th Airbus Defence and Space
satellites to be orbited by Arianespace. The
satellites were produced in Florida, USA in its
leading-edge satellite manufacturing facilities that
can build up to two satellites per day on a series
production line dedicated to spacecraft assembly,
integration, and testing.
The medium-lift Soyuz (produced
by Progress Space Rocket Center, part of the Russian
State Space Corporation 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 wide
range of missions, including human space flights.
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