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Sun, Feb 16, 2003

Euro-Rocket Retired

So Long Ariane 4. Hellooooo Ariane 5

Arianespace's workhorse Ariane 4 wrapped up its career Saturday with a picture-perfect mission -- placing its Intelsat 907 payload into an accurate geostationary transfer orbit.

The early morning launch marked the final flight of an Ariane 4, and the 116th mission of this launcher version -- which entered service in 1988 and successfully orbited 158 primary payloads (plus 24 auxiliary payloads) with a combined mass of well over 400 metric tons.

Following three days of postponements blamed on high-altitude winds above the Spaceport, the historic mission took off at the start of a one-hour launch window that opened at 4:00 a.m local Kourou time.

As if in tribute to the Ariane 4's career-closing mission, the weather cooperated by offering clear skies that allowed observers a perfect view of the launcher's initial climbout. Observers could clearly make out the separation of the four first-stage strap-on boosters at approximately 2 minutes, 30 seconds into the flight.

"The Ariane 4 program was an extraordinary technical achievement and a truly excellent human venture," Arianespace Chief Executive Officer Jean-Yves Le Gall said. "I want to personally thank all of the team members at the French CNES space agency, the European Space Agency, Arianespace, and the industrial participants in Europe and French Guiana."

The first mission in 2003...and a new launch contract

Flight 159 was Arianespace's first mission of 2003, and will be followed by four to five launches of the heavy-lift Ariane 5 -- the next-generation successor to Ariane 4.

Le Gall also announced the company's first commercial launch contract of 2003: the WildBlue 1 broadband satellite for WildBlue Communications. WildBlue 1 is one of the first fully-dedicated Ka-band satellites for consumer high-speed Internet service.

Saturday morning's mission lofted the 23rd Intelsat telecommunications payload orbited by Ariane, which was the sixth Intelsat IX-series spacecraft carried by Ariane 4. Flight 159 was the 74th consecutive successful launch of an Ariane 4.

Ariane 4 entered service in June 1988 as a follow-on to the Ariane 1-3 vehicles, which paved the way for Arianespace's leadership position in the commercial launch services market.

With its building-block design, Ariane 4 allowed a full range of payloads to be lofted by a family of launchers - all sharing the same basic design for streamlined operations, as well as a standardized payload interface for customers.

Ariane 4: A "Two-Fer" Launch Vehicle

Ariane 4 enabled Arianespace to regularly pair up two satellite payloads for shared dual missions - increasing the company's competitiveness and enabling customers to share the mission costs.

This experience will be applied to the Ariane 5 - with the new launcher's increased payload capability allowing even larger payloads to be paired up on each mission.

For Saturday morning's final mission, Arianespace used an Ariane 44L version of Ariane 4 equipped with the four large liquid strap-on boosters for additional thrust at liftoff and during initial ascent. The total mass placed into orbit was an estimated 4,722 kg. (Intelsat 907 weighed in at approximately 4,680 kg., while the spacecraft interface adapter weighed 42.5 kg.).

Major participants in the Ariane 4 program included: EADS Launch Vehicles (industrial lead contractor and prime for the first and third stages); Astrium GmbH for the second stage and solid strap-on boosters; Fiat-Avio and EADS Launch Vehicles for the solid propellant strap-on boosters; Astrium France for the vehicle equipment bay; Astrium UK for the SPELDA multiple payload deployment system; and Contraves Space for the payload fairing.

During its operational lifetime, the all-time record for Ariane 4 was the 4,947 kg. mass orbited by an Ariane 44L in 1998 on Flight 113, which carried the AfriStar and GE-5 satellites.

Flight 159 was performed from the Spaceport's ELA-2 launch complex, which has been the location of 119 Ariane liftoffs since the facility entered service in 1986. Arianespace's mission activity now shifts to the ELA-3 facility, which was built for Ariane 5 launch operations.

Saturday's mission also marked a historic milestone for Intelsat -- as its final Intelsat IX-series satellite was carried aboard the Ariane 4.

FMI: www.arianespace.com/site/index2.html

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