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Twin Galileos meet, ready for Thursday's launch
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Aug 19, 2014


The fifth and sixth Galileo satellites met on their dispenser on 11 August 2014 in the S5 payload preparation facility of the Guiana Space Centre. On Thursday 21 August they will be launched together by Soyuz into medium-Earth orbit. Nore the protective panels covering the satellites' folded-up solar panels, which will be removed before launch. Image courtesy ESA/Arianespace.

Final functional testing of Europe's twin Galileo navigation satellites has been completed at Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana, on track for launch this Thursday. The fuelling of the two satellites, allowing them to fine-tune their orbits and maintain their altitude over the course of their 12-year lifetimes, took place on 7-8 August.

Engineers donned protective SCAPE (Self Contained Atmospheric Protective Ensemble) suits to fill the satellites with hydrazine propellant. Then, on 11 August, the two satellites were installed together on the flight dispenser that secures them to the Soyuz launcher's Fregat upper stage.

The follow-on installation of the stack - the two satellites plus dispenser - onto the Fregat stage was completed on 15 August , then encased within its protective launch fairing. Today this combined upper composite - also known as the 'space head' - will be attached to the other three stages of the powerful Soyuz ST-B launcher ready to haul it up into orbit on Thursday.

Final operations for the launch will proceed early this week with a final countdown leading to a launcher liftoff scheduled for Thursday, 21 August at 14:31:14 CEST (12:31:14 UTC). At three hours, 47 minutes and 57 seconds after liftoff, the satellites will then be deployed from their Fregat by the dispenser's pyrotechnic separation system once their final 23 222 km altitude is reached.

These new satellites will join four Galileo satellites already in orbit, launched in October 2011 and October 2012 respectively. This first quartet were 'In-Orbit Validation' satellites, serving to demonstrate the Galileo system would function as planned.

Now that work has been done, the 'Full Operational Capability' satellites being launched this week are significant as the first of the rest of the Galileo constellation. The payloads generating navigation signals to Earth have been manufactured by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd in the UK, while the satellites carrying them have been built by OHB in Germany.

A steady stream of launches is planned for the next few years, with two Galileo satellites flown per Soyuz launch and four Galileo satellites flown per launch of an Ariane 5 variant currently in preparation.

Galileo partners
The definition, development and In-Orbit Validation phases of the Galileo programme were carried out by ESA and co-funded by ESA and the EU.

The Full Operational Capability phase is managed and fully funded by the European Commission. The Commission and ESA have signed a delegation agreement by which ESA acts as design and procurement agent on behalf of the Commission.

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