Saturday, January 20, 1996

Raduga 17

 1985-107A


Raduga/Gran' No. 28 was launched in Nov 1985 to become the Statsionar 3 satellite at 35E, replacing Raduga No. 21. Raduga 28 was stationed at 35E until 1988, when it moved to the 69E Indian Ocean position for two years. In 1990 it was moved to 85E, and in Sep 1991 it was stored at 49E until retirement in Dec 1992.


Raduga No. 28(F18) 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1985 Nov 15  1429:00 Launch by Proton-K  KB 
 1438  Stage 3 sep 
 1545? DM burn 1 
 2103? DM burn 2 
 2107? DM sep 
1985 Nov 15    1480.38 36547 x 36750 x 1.4 GEO 94.4E+10.8W 
1985 Nov 18    1480.72 36568 x 36742 x 1.3 GEO 69.9E+10.9W 
1985 Nov 23    1436.52 35791 x 35798 x 1.3 GEO 35.8E+0.1W 
1986 Jan 7    1436.09 35776 x 35795 x 1.2 GEO 34.3E 
1987 Apr 12    1436.35 35787 x 35796 x 0.1 GEO 35.6E 
1988 Jan 21    1436.40 35791 x 35793 x 0.7 GEO 35.5E 
1988 Nov 15    1435.94 35774 x 35792 x 1.5 GEO 34.8E 
1988 Nov 16   mv out  
1988 Dec 9   mv in  1436.18 35769 x 35806 x 1.6 GEO 69.7E 
1989 Mar 1    1436.08 35766 x 35805 x 1.8 GEO 69.2E 
1990 Jan 16    1436.17 35767 x 35808 x 2.6 GEO 69.1E 
1990 Apr 19    1435.97 35773 x 35794 x 2.8 GEO 70.2E 
1990 Apr 20   mv out 
1990 Apr 30   mv in  1436.07 35774 x 35797 x 2.8 GEO 85.1E 
1990 Aug 28    1435.95 35780 x 35787 x 3.1 GEO 85.2E 
1991 Jul 4    1436.19 35785 x 35791 x 3.9 GEO 85.6E 
1991 Aug 15    1436.32 35784 x 35797 x 4.0 GEO 83.8E 
1991 Aug 20   mv out  1441.24 35801 x 35972 x 4.0 
1991 Sep 23   mv in  1436.29 35769 x 35810 x 4.1 GEO 49.5E 
1992 Jan 11    1435.96 35758 x 35809 x 4.4 GEO 48.7E 
1992 Dec 8   1435.94 35756 x 35811 x 5.1 GEO 50.1E 

Partners in Love

https://welib.org/md5/f713ac0e424dadbc754c53c4d6e546a3

Friday, January 19, 1996

Okean 2

 1990-018A


The second named Okean was Okean-O1 No. 5 (NKhM No. 7).


Okean-O1 No. 5 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1990 Feb 28  0055:00  Launch by Tsiklon-3  PL 32/2 
  T+2:00 St 1 sep 
  T+3:33 GO sep 
  T+4:38 St 2 sep 
  T+5:20 S5M burn 1 
 0101  T+6:48 S5M MECO1 
  T+39:20 BOZ burn 
 0135 T+40:58 S5M burn 2  
 0136 T+41:08 S5M MECO2 
  T+41:38 S5M sep 
1990 Feb 28    97.78 639 x 665 x 82.5 
1994 Jul 12 end of ops 

Thursday, January 18, 1996

Kosmos 1847

 1987-046A



Kosmos-1847 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1987 May 26  1339:59 Launch by Soyuz  PL 
 1348  Blok-I sep 
1987 May 26    89.65 168 x 345 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 1    89.19 159 x 308 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 3   
89.72 173 x 348 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 15   SpK-1 fiducial 
 0445?  Deorbit 
 0455?  Entry 
 0507?  Landed
1987 Jun 15    89.58 181 x 325 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 15  

89.17 168 x 298 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 20    88.81 163 x 268 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 21   
89.56 181 x 324 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 21   
89.29 181 x 297 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 28    88.96 176 x 269 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 28   
89.53 177 x 324 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 3    89.32 176 x 304 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 4   
89.71 179 x 340 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 5   SpK-2 fiducial 
 0706?  Deorbit 
 0716? Entry 
 0728?  Landed
1987 Jul 21  1842   88.86 172 x 263 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 22   
 1824? Deorbit 
 1839? Entry 
 1851?  Landed

Saturn SA-10

  1965-060A


Saturn SA-10 was launched at 1300:01 on 1965 Jul 30 and reached orbit at 1310:34. The orbital parameters were 95.52 min, 535 x 667 km x 28.8 deg. The Apollo BP-9A CSM separated from the Saturn S-4-10 stage and the cylindrical SMA (Service Module Adapter), allowing the Pegasus III MMC (micrometeoroid mounting capsule) payload to deploy. Pegasus III remained attached to the Saturn. It reentered on 1969 Aug 4. The mission was known as Apollo-Saturn 104 (AS-104).


SA-10 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1965 Jul 30  1300:01 Launch by Saturn I  KSC 
 1302:23  T+2:22 IECO 
 1302:29 T+2:28 OECO 
 1302:30  T+2:29 S-I sep  -6070 x 262  
 1302:31 S-IV burn 
 1302:42 Ullage motors sep 
 1302:42 LES sep 
 1305:54  S-I apogee 262 km 
 1310:30 S-IV-10 ECO 
 1310:41  Orbit insertion 
 1312:05 S-I impact 
 1313:32  LH2 NPV venting complete 
 1313:33  Pegasus C forward restraint sep 
 1313:33  Apollo BP-9A sep 
 1314:33  Pegasus C wing deploy 
 1315:12  Pegasus C wing complete

Wednesday, January 17, 1996

DFH-37

 1993-063A


The FSW-1 No. 5 flight was announced as Jian Bing 93 (Progress or Pathfinder). Mass was 2100 kg.


FSW 1 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1993 Oct 8  0800  Launch by CZ-2C  JQ 
 0802  T+2:10 MECO 
 0802  Stage 2 burn 
 0804?  T+4:02? Stage 2 MECO 
 0807?  Stage 2 VECO 
 0808?  Stage 2 sep 
1993 Oct 10    89.54 207 x 295 x 56.9 
1993 Oct 16  0520  Equipment module sep 
1993 Oct 16   Capsule sep 
1993 Oct 20  1900   88.96 195 x 250 x 56.9 
1993 Oct 28   Reentered over Pacific 

Cold War chronology : Soviet-American relations, 1945-1991

 https://welib.org/md5/a9d042cbddf742a2e4643533964da52e

Tuesday, January 16, 1996

Resurs 1992

 1992-056A


14F43 No. 54, a Resurs F-1 spacecraft, was launched on 1992 Aug 19 and announced with the name Resurs F. It carried a US Defense Department secondary payload provided by the Naval Research Lab, an experiment to study atmospheric circulation using Beryllium-7 as a tracer. The Resurs F-1 also carried two Pion-Germes subsatellites.


Resurs F-1 14F43 No. 54 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1992 Aug 19  1010  Launch by Soyuz-U  PL LC16 
 1018  Blok I sep 
1992 Aug 20  0230   89.10 221 x 238 x 82.56 
1992 Aug 25  1200   89.09 223 x 235 x 82.57 
1992 Sep 1   Pion sep 
1992 Sep 2   Pion sep 
1992 Sep 30230   89.04 221 x 232 x 82.56 
1992 Sep 4    
 0614?  Deorbit 
 0624? PO sep 
 0631? Entry 
 0646? Landed 

Hesiod, The Homeric Hymns, and Homerica

 https://www.gutenberg.org/files/348/348.txt

May 13,2026

  https://planet4589.org/space/jsr/back/news.855.txt