🇸🇪 🇩🇪 Swedish Space Corporation (SSC) to support OHB Heinrich Hertz mission

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Press release from SSC

SSC to support OHB Heinrich Hertz mission

SSC has been contracted by OHB System AG to provide TT&C, LEOP and Emergency S-Band support for Germany’s new communications satellite Heinrich Hertz, also known as “H2SAT”. The spacecraft is scheduled the be launched on Friday 16 June, at 1:01 am GMT+2, from Kourou in French Guiana.

“We have considered buying GSaaS from day one as we knew that we would not invest in the ground infrastructure, used for short but critical periods, ourselves. We prefer to augment our network as needed through a service approach that offers flexibility. Now we have found a ground segment provider that can support our growing requirements over time,” says Alan Moorhouse, Head of Satellite Operations at OHB-DC.

The Heinrich Hertz mission is managed by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi), while the Space Administration of the German Aerospace Center (DLR) is responsible for planning and implementation of the project. The development and operation of the spacecraft is performed by OHB on behalf of DLR.

As a subcontractor to OHB, SSC will provide satellite control and traffic monitoring for the spacecraft through TT&C, LEOP and Emergency S-band support. Six SSC CONNECT ground stations will support the mission: Esrange in Kiruna, South Point in Hawaii, Santiago in Chile and WASC in Australia, as well as Bangalore in India and Hartebeesthoek in South Africa.

“Sweden and Germany have always had strong ties in space, and SSC’s close relationship with OHB has continued to grow over the years. The contract that we announce today is a milestone illustrating this. Our long experience, worldwide ground station locations and global network capabilities is what makes us able to meet the high requirements of this mission,” says Nicholas Priborsky, President of the Satellite Management Services division at SSC.

With a design life of 15 years, H2Sat is set to explore and test new communications technologies in Space under extreme conditions. The aim is to understand how to expand commercial satellite communications for geostationary satellites. It will help, for instance, to determine how broadband communications can result in high data rates for mobile end-users. The spacecraft will also provide secure and independent communications for the German Armed Forces.

For more information, please contact:
Philip Ohlsson, Head of Communications at SSC
+46 (0) 707 21 70 26, [email protected]


Originally published on 13 June. 

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