Kosmos 2501
Model of a GLONASS-K satellite | |
Mission type | Navigation |
---|---|
Operator | VKO |
COSPAR ID | 2014-075A |
SATCAT no. | 40315 |
Mission duration | 10 years |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Glonass No.702K Uragan-K1 No. 12L[1] |
Spacecraft type | Uragan-K1 |
Bus | Ekspress-1000A |
Manufacturer | ISS Reshetnev |
Launch mass | 935 kg |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 30 November 2014, 21:52:26 (2014-11-30UTC21:52:26Z) UTC |
Rocket | Soyuz-2-1b / Fregat-M |
Launch site | Plesetsk, Site 43/4 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Medium Earth |
Perigee altitude | 19155 km |
Apogee altitude | 19199 km |
Inclination | 64,8° |
Period | 677.6 minutes |
Kosmos 2501 (Russian: Космос 2501 meaning Cosmos 2501), also known as Glonass-K1 No.12L is a Russian navigation satellite which was launched in 2014. The second Glonass-K satellite to be launched, it is the second of two Glonass-K1 spacecraft which will serve as prototypes for the operational Glonass-K2 spacecraft.[2]
Kosmos 2501 is a 935-kilogram (2,061 lb) satellite, which was built by ISS Reshetnev based on the Ekspress-1000A satellite bus. The spacecraft has three-axis stabilisation to keep it in the correct orientation, and will broadcast signals in the L1, L2 and L3 navigation bands for Russian military and commercial users.[2] In addition to its navigation payloads, the satellite also carries a Cospas-Sarsat search and rescue payload.[2]
The satellite is located in a medium Earth orbit with a perigee of 19,155 kilometres (11,902 mi), an apogee of 19,199 kilometres (11,930 mi), and 64.8° of inclination.[3] It is equipped with two solar panels to generate power, and is expected to remain in service for ten years.
Kosmos 2501 was launched from Site 43/4 at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwest Russia. A Soyuz-2.1b carrier rocket with a Fregat upper stage was used to perform the launch, which took place at 21:52:26 UTC on 30 November 2014.[4] The launch successfully placed the satellite into a Medium Earth orbit. It subsequently received its Kosmos designation, and the International Designator 2014-075A. The United States Space Command assigned it the Satellite Catalog Number 40315.
References
- ^ McDowell, Jonathan. "Satellite Catalog". Jonathan's Space Page. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ a b c Krebs, Gunter. "Uragan-K1 (GLONASS-K1)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
- ^ McDowell, Jonathan. "Jonathan's Space Report Issue 706". Jonathan's Space Report. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
- ^ Zak, Anatoly. "GLONASS-K No. 12 satellite". RussianSpaceWeb. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
- v
- t
- e
- Kosmos 2495
- Ekspress AM4R
- USA-251
- USA-252
- Kosmos 2496, Kosmos 2497, Kosmos 2498, Kosmos 2499
- ALOS-2, Raijin-2, UNIFORM-1, SOCRATES, SPROUT
- Eutelsat 3B
- Soyuz TMA-13M
- Kosmos 2500 / GLONASS-M 755
- AprizeSat 9, AprizeSat 10, BRITE-Montreal, BRITE-Toronto, BugSat 1, Deimos-2, Hodoyoshi 3, Hodoyoshi 4, KazEOSat 2, Perseus-M1, Perseus-M2, SaudiSat-4, TabletSat-Aurora, UniSat-6 (Lemur-1, Tigrisat), Flock-1c × 11
- SPOT 7, CanX-4, CanX-5
- OCO-2
- Gonets-M × 3
- Meteor-M No.2
- O3b × 4
- CRS Orb-2 (Flock-1b × 28, TechEdSat-4)
- Orbcomm-OG2 × 6
- Foton-M No.4
- Progress M-24M
- USA-253 / GSSAP 1, USA-254 / GSSAP 2, USA-255 / ANGELS
- Georges Lemaître ATV
- USA-256
- AsiaSat 8
- Yaogan 20 A, B, C
- WorldView-3
- Gaofen 2, Heweliusz
- Galileo FOC-1, Galileo FOC-2
- Chuangxin 1-04, Lingqiao
- AsiaSat 6
- Yaogan 21, Tiantuo 2
- MEASAT 3b, Optus 10
- USA-257
- SpaceX CRS-4
- Soyuz TMA-14M
- Olimp-K
- Shijian XI-07
- Himawari 8
- IRNSS-1C
- ARSAT-1, Intelsat 30
- Yaogan 22
- Ekspress AM6
- Chang'e 5-T1, 4M
- Shijian 11-08
- Cygnus CRS Orb-3† (Arkyd-3†, Flock-1d × 26†)
- Progress M-25M
- USA-258 / GPS IIF 8
- Meridian 7
- Sasuke, Hodoyoshi 1, Kinshachi 1, Tsukushi, TSUBAME
- Yaogan 23
- Yaogan 24
- Kuaizhou 2
- Soyuz TMA-15M
- Kosmos 2501
- Hayabusa2, PROCYON, Shinen 2, DESPATCH
- Orion EFT-1
- DirecTV-14, GSAT-16
- CBERS-4
- Yaogan 25 A, B, C
- USA-259
- Yamal-401
- O3b × 4 (FM9 to FM12)
- Kondor-E No.2
- IPM
- Kosmos 2502
- Resurs-P No.2
- Yaogan 26
- Astra 2G
- Fengyun 2-08
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).