Kourou, French Guiana, December 18, 2004- Arianespace has successfully launched the Helios IIA observation satellite for the French, Belgian and Spanish ministries of defense.
Following a flight lasting 60 minutes and 8 seconds, the Ariane 5 launch vehicle accurately injected Helios IIA into Sun-synchronous polar orbit. The mission also deployed six auxiliary payloads: four Essaim micro-satellites and two other small spacecraft, Parasol and Nanosat.
Sixteenth successful launch
With its 16th successful mission, the standard Ariane 5G (“Generic”) launcher continues to confirm its technical and operational maturity. The launcher also showed its ability to handle a complete range of missions, from government launches into Sun-synchronous orbit to huge commercial satellites into geostationary orbit and scientific spacecraft into special orbits.
The launch was from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on Saturday, December 18, at1:26 p.m. local time in Kourou (1626 GMT, and 5:26 pm in Paris).
A Boost for Defense
The Ariane 5 launcher is a key to the development of a common European defense and security policy, which must include space capability. Helios IIA is the 23rd military payload to be carried by Europe’s Ariane launcher.
Arianespace covers the spectrum of missions needed by European armed forces:
- Optical observation, including launches of Helios 1A in July 1995 and Helios 1B in December 1999 (for France, Italy, Spain).
- Telecommunications, with Syracuse I, II and II (France), Sicral 1 (Italy), Skynet 4 (U.K.), Hispasat 1A and 1B (Spain), Turksat 1A, 1B, 1C and Eurasiasat (Turkey).