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USA 233

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Operator
  
US Air Force

SATCAT no.
  
38070

Spacecraft type
  
WGS Block II

Launch mass
  
5,987 kg

Launch date
  
20 January 2012

Contractor
  
United Launch Alliance

COSPAR ID
  
2012-003A

Mission duration
  
14 years

Manufacturer
  
Boeing

Launch mass
  
5,987 kg

Bus
  
Boeing 702

Mission type
  
Communications satellite

Similar
  
Skynet 5D, Luch 5B, Colorado Student S, Goliat, PROITERES

USA-233 or WGS-4 is an American military communications satellite which was launched in 2012. The fourth Wideband Global SATCOM spacecraft, it is the first WGS Block II satellite to be launched.

USA-233 can transmit data with approximately 3.6 gigabits per second bandwidth. It can point 19 individual beams at different points on the Earth, operating at x band and ka band frequencies. Built by Boeing around the BSS-702 bus, the 5,987-kilogram (13,199 lb) satellite is expected to operate for 14 years. Propulsion is provided by an R-4D apogee motor, and four XIPS-25 ion thrusters for stationkeeping.

The launch of USA-233 took place at 00:38 UTC on 20 January 2012, using a Delta IV-M+(5,4) carrier rocket flying from Space Launch Complex 37B at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The launch was conducted by United Launch Alliance, and marked the eighteenth flight of the Delta IV. The carrier rocket successfully placed the satellite into a 440-by-66,870-kilometre (270 by 41,550 mi) supersynchronous transfer orbit, with 24 degrees of inclination. Upon achieving orbit, WGS-4 was assigned its USA designation, and the International Designator 2012-003A. The satellite will use its onboard propulsion systems to inject itself into geosynchronous orbit.

References

USA-233 Wikipedia