Launch date
12 August 2024
Country

Purpose
Communication
Position
65° North
Manufacturer
Orbital ATK
Operator
Space Norway (former Telenor Satellite Services)
Launch operator
SpaceX
Expected lifetime
15 Years
ASBM‑1 & ASBM‑2: Space Norway’s Arctic HEO Broadband Satellites
Overview & Purpose
ASBM‑1 and ASBM‑2—part of the Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission (ASBM)—are the world’s first commercial Highly Elliptical Orbit (HEO) satellites designed for continuous high-speed broadband connectivity above 65° N latitude. Operated by Space Norway, they provide reliable X-band and Ka-band communications for military, government, maritime, and scientific users in the High Arctic .
Satellite Specifications & Orbit
- Manufacturer: Northrop Grumman (GEOStar‑3 bus)
- Launch Mass: ~3.5 tonnes each (fuelled), with ~2 tonnes dry.
- Size: ~3×3×4 m, ~27 m solar wingspan
- Orbit Type: HEO “Three-Apogee Period (TAP)” orbits, 16-hour cycle with ~43,500 km apogee over the Arctic and ~8,100 km perigee
- Inclination: 63° plane separation of ~8 hours, enabling ~10 hours continuous coverage with overlap
- Service Life: 15 years
Launch Details
- Launch Date: August 11, 2024, at 19:02 UTC
- Launch Vehicle: SpaceX Falcon 9 from Vandenberg SFB, USA
- Deployment: Satellites launched stacked; first signals received post-launch
Payloads & Partnerships
- X-band payloads for Norwegian Armed Forces
- Hosted S. Space Force EPS‑R military payloads—the first U.S. military payload aboard a non-U.S. satellite
- Ka-band GX10A/B payloads for Viasat, extending Global Xpress broadband across the Arctic
- On one satellite, a Norwegian IDEAS radiation monitor aids European Commission’s Galileo efforts
Strategic Significance
- First-ever commercial HEO broadband satellites, offering uninterrupted Arctic connectivity.
- Pioneers integration of military and commercial payloads aboard one platform.
- Enhances US-Norway cooperation, allowing advanced gov/military Arctic communications.
- Enables real-time broadband to support scientific research, maritime navigation, security, and emergency services above 65° N.