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Hot Bird (also styled Hotbird [1]) is a group of satellites operated by Eutelsat, located at 13°E over the equator (orbital position) and with a transmitting footprint over Asia, Europe, North Africa, Americas and the Middle East. Only digital radio and television channels are transmitted by the Hot Bird constellation, both free-to-air and ...
Hot Bird 13B (Hot Bird 8) [40] 2006-032A 13°E: Proton-M/Briz-M: Europe, North Africa, Middle East 5 August 2006 Formerly named Hot Bird 8 until March 2012 Hot Bird 13C (Hot Bird 9) 2008-065D Ariane 5 ECA: 20 December 2008 Formerly named Hot Bird 9 until March 2012 Hot Bird 13E (Hot Bird 7A/Eurobird 9A/Eutelsat 9A) [41] 2006-007B 11 March 2006
Eutelsat 33E, previously known as Hot Bird 10, Atlantic Bird 4A, Eutelsat 3B and Nilesat 104, Hot Bird 13D is a French communications satellite.Operated by Eutelsat, it provides direct to home broadcasting services from geostationary orbit as part of Eutelsat's Hot Bird constellation at a longitude of 13 degrees east.
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches Eutelsat's Hotbird 13G satellite from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 1:22 a.m. EDT Thursday, Nov. 3, 2022.
NHK World Premium's contents in Europe were previously shown on JSTV-branded subscription channels that were ran by NHK Cosmomedia Europe and headquartered in the UK. The service was known as テレビジャパン ( TV Japan ) in the US, which was run by NHK Cosmomedia America until it closed on March 31, 2024; its replacement streaming service ...
A universal LNB has a switchable local oscillator frequency of 9.75/10.60 GHz to provide two modes of operation: low band reception (10.70–11.70 GHz) and high band reception (11.70–12.75 GHz). The local oscillator frequency is switched in response to a 22 kHz signal superimposed on the supply voltage from the connected receiver.
Hot Bird 13C, formerly Hot Bird 9, is a communications satellite operated by Eutelsat, launched 20 December 2008 aboard an Ariane 5ECA carrier rocket along with the Eutelsat W2M spacecraft. [1] It was built by EADS Astrium, based on a Eurostar E3000 satellite bus. It was positioned in geosynchronous orbit at 13°E.
European countries have a tradition of most television services being free-to-air. Germany, in particular, receives in excess of 100 digital satellite TV channels free-to-air. Approximately half of the television channels on SES Astra's 19.2° east and 28.2° east satellite positions, and Eutelsat's Hot Bird (13° east) are free-to-air.