Meridian n°11L

Launch Success

Liftoff Time (GMT)

08:34:44

Sunday December 24, 2006

Mission Details

Launch Notes

First Meridian satellite launched.

Meridian n°11L

Wiki

The Meridian series of communications satellites is reported to be the replacement for all the Molniya-1T, the Molniya-3 and Molniya-3K satellite series and possibly also for the communication component of the Parus. They are launched into highly eccentric Molniya-orbits. Meridian is the highly eccentric orbit (HEO) component of the Integrated Satellite Communications System (ISSS), where they work in conjunction with the geostationary Raduga-1M (Globus-M) satellites. The bus structure is reportedly pressurized, possibly based on the Uragan-M bus. Meridian satellites carry three transponders operating in different frequency bands. The first two satellites were launched on Soyuz-2-1a Fregat boosters, afterwards the improved Soyuz-2-1a Fregat took over. The fifth satellite was an exception, which used a Soyuz-2-1b Fregat booster inherited from another program. Launch site was the Plesetsk cosmodrome. The second launch reached only a 290 km × 36460 km × 62.8° orbit, indicating a Fregat failure during the end of the second burn, with the third burn not taking place. Nevertheless, the satellite is operational in this lower than planned orbit. The fifth launch failed to reach orbit. The Meridian series was to end with the seventh launch. It was to replaced by a new series beginning in 2016, which will feature unpressurized busses. Instead, in February 2016, a new batch of four similar but slightly improved Meridian-M satellites was ordered, with the first to be launched in 2018.

Molniya Orbit

1 Payload

2,100 kilograms

Rocket

Active
Soyuz 2.1a/Fregat-M

Active Since 2006

RKK Energiya logo

Manufacturer

RKK Energiya

Price

$23.00 million

Rocket

Height: 46.94m

Payload to Orbit

LEO: 7,020 kg

GTO: 2,810 kg

Liftoff Thrust

4,550 Kilonewtons

Fairing

Diameter: 4.11m

Height: 10.2m

Stages

4

Strap-ons

4

Launch Site

Site 43/4

Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russia

Fastest Turnaround

37 hr 53 min

Stats

Soyuz 2.1a


3rd

Mission

2nd

Mission of 2006

2006


64th

Orbital launch attempt