USA-241
SBIRS GEO-2 satellite in orbit | |
Names | SBIRS GEO-2 (SV-2) Space-Based Infrared System GEOstationary-2 [1] |
---|---|
Mission type | Infrared early warning IRINT |
Operator | United States Air Force / United States Space Force |
COSPAR ID | 2013-011A |
SATCAT no. | 39120 |
Website | https://www.spaceforce.mil/ |
Mission duration | 12 years (planned) 11 years, 5 months and 7 days (in progress) |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | SBIRS GEO-2 |
Spacecraft type | SBIRS GEO |
Bus | A2100M |
Manufacturer | Lockheed Martin Space |
Launch mass | 4,500 kg (9,900 lb) |
Dimensions | 15 m x 6.7 m x 6.1 m |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 19 March 2013, 21:21:00 UTC[2] |
Rocket | Atlas V 401 (AV-037) |
Launch site | Cape Canaveral, SLC-41 |
Contractor | United Launch Alliance |
Entered service | October 2013 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric orbit |
Regime | Geostationary orbit |
Space-Based Infrared System program ← SBIRS GEO-1 SBIRS GEO-3 → |
USA-241, also known as SBIRS GEO-2,[1] is a United States military satellite and part of the Space-Based Infrared System.
Overview
The SBIRS satellites are a replacement for the Defense Support Program early warning system. They are intended to detect ballistic missile launches, as well as various other events in the infrared spectrum, including nuclear explosions, aircraft flights, space object entries and reentries, wildfires and spacecraft launches.
Satellite description
SBIRS-GEO 2 was manufactured by Lockheed Martin Space and is built upon the A2100M satellite bus.
Launch
SBIRS GEO-2 was launched on 19 March 2013 from Cape Canaveral, atop an Atlas V launch vehicle.
Mission
In October 2013, the satellite was incorporated into the United States early warning network.[3]
References
- v
- t
- e
- Intelsat 27
- Globalstar M078, M087, M093, M094, M095, M096
- Azerspace-1/Africasat-1a, Amazonas 3
- Progress M-18M
- Landsat 8
- SARAL, Sapphire, NEOSSat, UniBRITE-1, TUGSAT-1, AAUSat-3, STRaND-1
- SpaceX CRS-2
- USA-241
- Satmex 8
- Soyuz TMA-08M
- Anik G1
- Bion-M No.1 (Aist 2, BeeSat-2, BeeSat-3, SOMP, Dove-2, OSSI-1)
- Cygnus Mass Simulator, Dove 1, Alexander, Graham, Bell
- Progress M-19M
- Gaofen 1, TurkSat-3USat, NEE-01 Pegaso, CubeBug-1
- Kosmos 2485
- IRNSS-1A
- Uragan-M 48, 49, 50
- Shijian XI-05
- MUOS-2
- Shijian 15, Shiyan 7, Chuangxin 3
- Inmarsat-4A F4, INSAT-3D
- Progress M-20M
- Kounotori 4 (TechEdSat-3, ArduSat-1, ArduSat-X, PicoDragon)
- USA-244
- Arirang-5
- USA-245
- Eutelsat 25B / Es'hail 1, GSAT-7 / INSAT-4F
- Amos-4
- Yaogan 17 A, B, C
- LADEE
- Gonets-M No.5, Gonets-M No.6, Gonets-M No.7
- Hisaki
- USA-246
- Cygnus Orb-D1
- Fengyun III-03
- Kuaizhou-1
- Soyuz TMA-10M
- CASSIOPE, CUSat, POPACS 1, 2, 3, DANDE
- Astra 2E
- Shijian 16
- Sirius FM-6
- Yaogan 18
- Mars Orbiter Mission
- Soyuz TMA-11M
- Globus-1M No.13L
- MAVEN
- ORS-3, STPSat-3, Black Knight 1, CAPE-2, ChargerSat-1, COPPER, DragonSat-1, Firefly (satellite), Ho'oponopono-2, Horus, KySat-2, NPS-SCAT, ORSES, ORS Tech 1, 2, PhoneSat 2.4, Prometheus × 8, SENSE A, B, SwampSat, TJ3Sat, Trailblazer-1, Vermont Lunar CubeSat
- Yaogan 19
- DubaiSat-2, STSAT-3, SkySat-1, UniSat-5 (Dove 4, ICube-1, HumSat-D, PUCP-Sat 1 (Pocket-PUCP), BeakerSat-1, $50SAT, QBScout-1, WREN), AprizeSat 7, 8, Lem, WNISat-1, GOMX-1, CubeBug-2, Delfi-n3Xt, Dove 3, First-MOVE, FUNcube-1, HINCube-1, KHUSat-1, KHUSat-2, NEE-02 Krysaor, OPTOS, Triton 1, UWE-3, VELOX-P2, ZACUBE-1, BPA-3
- Swarm A, B, C
- Shiyan 5
- Progress M-21M
- Chang'e 3 (Yutu)
- SES-8
- USA-247 / Topaz, TacSat-6
- Inmarsat-5 F1
- CBERS-3†
- Gaia
- Túpac Katari 1
- Kosmos 2488 / Strela-3M 7, Kosmos 2489 / Strela-3M 8, Kosmos 2490 / Strela-3M 9, Kosmos-2491
- Ekspress AM5
- Aist 1, Kosmos 2491 / SKRL-756 1, Kosmos 2492 / SKRL-756 2
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).