Everything about Telstar totally explained
Telstar was the first active
communications satellite (launched in 1962), and the first
satellite designed to transmit telephone and high-speed data communications. Its name is used to this day for a number of
television broadcasting satellites.
Description
Belonging to
AT&T, the original Telstar was part of a multi-national agreement between AT&T,
Bell Telephone Laboratories,
NASA, the British
General Post Office, and the to develop
satellite communication. Bell also built the
Andover Earth Station in
Andover, Maine, and held a contract with NASA, reimbursing the agency three million dollars for each launch, independent of success.
The satellite was built by a team at Bell Telephone Laboratories, including
John Robinson Pierce who created the project,
Rudy Kompfner who invented the
traveling wave tube transponder used in the satellite, It was roughly spherical, was 34.5 inches (880 mm) long, and weighed 170 pounds (77 kg). Its dimensions were limited by what would fit in one of NASA's
Delta rockets. Telstar was spin-stabilized, so its outer surface was covered by
solar cells in order to always receive some power. The power produced was a relatively tiny 14W.
Telstar was equipped with a
helical antenna which received
microwave signals from a ground station, then amplified and rebroadcast the signal. The broadcasts were made from a series of somewhat directional
feed horns distributed around the satellite's "equator". The electronics switched which antenna was active as the satellite rotated.
The main earth receiving station was
Goonhilly Downs in the south-west of England and was used by the
BBC. It was the international coordinator and the standards 525/405 conversion equipment (filling a very large room at that time) was researched and developed by the BBC and located in the
BBC Television Centre London.
Also with
Early Bird in 1964 as well as the Summer Olympics mostly coming into Europe via the BBC, the main US networks, NBC, CBS and ABC all made their contributions from Europe mainly through the BBC.
(N.Smyth-Irish)
Launched by
NASA aboard a
Delta rocket from
Cape Canaveral on
July 10,
1962, Telstar was the first privately sponsored space launch. A medium-altitude satellite, Telstar was placed in an
elliptical orbit (completed once every 2 hours and 37 minutes), revolving at a 45 degree angle above the equator. Because of this, its transmission availability for
transatlantic signals was only 20 minutes in each orbit.
In service
Telstar relayed its first television pictures (of a flag outside
Andover Earth Station) to on the date of its launch. Almost two weeks later, on
July 23, it relayed the first live transatlantic television signal. The first broadcast was to have been remarks by
President John F. Kennedy, but the signal was acquired before the President was ready, so the lead-in time was filled with a short segment of a televised
major league baseball game between the
Philadelphia Phillies and the
Chicago Cubs at
Wrigley Field Box Score
(
Tony Taylor was seen flying out to rightfielder
George Altman). During that evening it also dealt with the first
telephone call transmitted through space and successfully transmitted faxes, data, and both live and taped television, including the first live transmission of television across an ocean (to, in
France; ). US president
Kennedy gave a live transatlantic press conference via Telstar.
Telstar, which had ushered in a new age of the benevolent use of technology, actually became a victim of technology during the
Cold War. The day before Telstar was launched, the United States tested a high-altitude nuclear device (called
Starfish Prime) which super-energized the Earth's
Van Allen Belt where Telstar took orbit. This vast increase in radiation, combined with further increases during subsequent high-altitude blasts, including a Soviet test in October, overwhelmed Telstar's fragile transistors; it went out of service in early December, but was restarted by a workaround in early January of 1963. The additional radiation associated with its return to full sunlight once again caused transistor failure, this time irreparably, and it went out of service on
February 21,
1963.
According to the US Space Objects Registry, Telstar 1 was still in orbit as of March 2008.
Experiments continued, and by
1964, two Telstars, two Relay units (from
RCA), and two
Syncom units (from the
Hughes Aircraft Company) had operated successfully in space.
Syncom 2 was the first
geosynchronous satellite and its successor,
Syncom 3, broadcast pictures from the
1964 Summer Olympics. The first commercial
geosynchronous satellite was
Intelsat I ("Early Bird") launched in
1965.
Newer Telstars
The next wave of Telstar satellites launched with
Telstar 301 in
1983, and was followed by Telstar 302 in
1984 and Telstar 303 in
1985.
The next wave, starting with
Telstar 401 came in
1993 and was lost in
1997 from a magnetic storm and Telstar 402 was launched but destroyed shortly after in
1994. It was replaced in
1995 by Telstar 402R, eventually renamed Telstar 4.
Telstar 10 was launched in China in 1997 by APT Satellite Company, Ltd.
In
2003, Telstars 4–8 and 13 —
Loral Skynet's North American fleet — were sold to
Intelsat. Telstar 4 suffered complete failure prior to handover; the others were renamed
Intelsat Americas 5, 6, etc. At the time of the sale, Telstar 8 was still under construction by
Space Systems/Loral, and was finally launched
June 23,
2005 by
Sea Launch.
Telstar 18 was launched in June
2004 by
Sea Launch. The upper stage of the rocket underperformed, but the satellite used its significant
stationkeeping fuel margin to achieve its operational
geostationary orbit; it has enough on-board fuel remaining that will allow it to exceed its specified 13-year design life.
Derivative uses of the name
Joe Meek composed a popular instrumental recording in
1962, named
Telstar after the satellite; it was originally performed by
The Tornados and covered by
The Ventures among many others.
Sound effects on the record, intended to symbolize radio signals, were produced by Meek running a pen around the rim of an ashtray, and then playing the tape of it in reverse. This track is also the unofficial club anthem of
East Fife F.C., a professional league soccer club from the town of
Methil in
Scotland.
Former
Bangles lead singer
Susanna Hoffs also recorded a song called "Wishing on Telstar" on her
1991 album
When You're a Boy.
Telstar was mentioned in the first episode of
The Addams Family television series pilot that aired Sept. 18, 1964. Mr. Addams mentions his friend Gumba in
Nairobi who could hurt the school board member, suggesting they use Telstar to call him.
In the
Netherlands, a
football club formed from a merger was named
SC Telstar after the satellites.
In the United States, the
heavy metal band
Helstar took their name partly from the satellite as well.
In
Belgium, the Belgo-Dutch
rock trio Telstar base their name on the
Joe Meek song.
The Scottish band
Telstar Ponies included
Teenage Fanclub drummer
Brendan O'Hare.
The
Telstar was also the name of a
Ford car sold in
Asia,
Australasia and
Southern Africa.
A high school in
Bethel, Maine, is named after the satellite.
(External Link
)
The
Adidas Telstar football (soccer ball) was designed for use in the
1970 and
1974 FIFA World Cup tournaments.
There is a
Spanish company called Telstar. It is a manufacturer of freeze-dryers and other high-technology equipment.
(External Link
)
Telstar was the name of a
mini-boss monster in
Squaresoft's hit
role-playing game Final Fantasy VI. The enemy was encountered in
Kefka's camp while besieging Doma Castle.
Project: Telstar is an anthology of robot-and space-themed comics published in 2003 by
AdHouse Books.
Telstar Drug was the name of a drug store in
Calgary,
Canada. The store's roof featured a neon sign in the shape of a rocket with the satellite on its nose. After the store closed, the sign was taken down and put on permanent display in the
Glenbow Museum.
Satellite High School in
Satellite Beach,
Florida, has a student newspaper named the Telstar.
The
Coleco Telstar was a 1970s
video game console based on the
General Instruments AY-3-8500 chip
Further Information
Get more info on 'Telstar'.
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