Kosmos 2458
Kosmos 2458 Mission type Navigation Operator Russian Space Forces COSPAR ID 2009-070C[ 1] SATCAT no. 36113[ 1]
Spacecraft GC 734 Spacecraft type Uragan-M Manufacturer Reshetnev ISS [ 2] Launch mass 1,415 kilograms (3,120 lb) [ 2] Dimensions 1.3 metres (4 ft 3 in) diameter [ 2] Power 1,540 watts[ 2]
Launch date December 14, 2009, 10:38 (2009-12-14UTC10:38Z ) UTC Rocket Proton-M /DM-2 [ 2] Launch site Baikonur 81/24
Reference system Geocentric Regime Medium Earth orbit [ 3] Semi-major axis 25,509 kilometres (15,851 mi)[ 1] Eccentricity 0.0001[ 1] Perigee altitude 19,129 kilometres (11,886 mi)[ 1] Apogee altitude 19,132 kilometres (11,888 mi)[ 1] Inclination 64.81 degrees[ 1] Period 675.76 minutes[ 1]
Kosmos 2458 (Russian : Космос 2458 meaning Cosmos 2458 ) is one of a set of three Russian military satellites launched in 2009 as part of the GLONASS satellite navigation system. It was launched with Kosmos 2456 and Kosmos 2457 .
This satellite is a GLONASS-M satellite, also known as Uragan-M, and is numbered Uragan-M No. 734.[ 1] [ 4]
Kosmos 2456/7/8 were launched from Site 81/24 at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. A Proton-M carrier rocket with a Blok DM upper stage was used to perform the launch which took place at 10:38 UTC on 14 December 2009. The launch successfully placed the satellites into Medium Earth orbit . It subsequently received its Kosmos designation, and the international designator 2009-070C. The United States Space Command assigned it the Satellite Catalog Numbers 36113.[ 1] [ 4]
It is in the first orbital plane of the GLONASS constellation, in orbital slot 5. It started operations on 10 January 2010.[ 5] [ 6]
See also
References
January February March April May June July
TerreStar-1
Kosmos 2451 , Kosmos 2452 , Kosmos 2453
RazakSAT
STS-127 (JEM-EF , AggieSat 2 , BEVO-1 , Castor , Pollux )
Kosmos 2454 , Sterkh No.11L
Progress M-67
DubaiSat-1 , Deimos-1 , UK-DMC 2 , Nanosat-1B , AprizeSat-3 , AprizeSat-4
August September
USA-207 / PAN
HTV-1
Meteor-M No.1 , BLITS , Sterkh-2 , SumbandilaSat , UGATUSAT , Universitetsky-Tatyana-2
Nimiq 5
Oceansat-2 , Rubin 9.1 , Rubin 9.2 , BeeSat-1 , UWE-2 , ITU-pSat1 , SwissCube-1
USA-208 / STSS-Demo 1 , USA-209 / STSS-Demo 2
Soyuz TMA-16
October November December Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).