Kosmos 2484
Mission type | Communications |
---|---|
Operator | VKO |
COSPAR ID | 2013-001C |
SATCAT no. | 39059 |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft type | Strela-3M |
Manufacturer | Reshetnev ISS[1] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | January 15, 2013, 16:24 (2013-01-15UTC16:24Z) UTC |
Rocket | Rokot/Briz-KM[2] |
Launch site | Plesetsk 133/3[1] |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Low Earth |
Kosmos 2484 (Russian: Космос 2484 meaning Cosmos 2484) is a Russian military store-dump communications satellite launched in 2013, together with Kosmos 2483 and Kosmos 2482.
This satellite is a Strela-3M/Rodnik satellite, a modification of the civilian Gonets satellites.[3]
Kosmos 2484 was launched from site 133/3 at Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern Russia. A rokot carrier rocket with a Briz-KM upper stage was used to perform the launch which took place at 16:24 UTC on 15 January 2013. The launch successfully placed the satellite into low Earth orbit. It subsequently received its Kosmos designation, and the international designator 2013-001C. The United States Strategic Command (the successor of the United States Space Command) assigned it the Satellite Catalog Number 39059.[3][4][5]
The launch was postponed from 8 December 2012 and was the first launch of a Rokot since the 28 July 2012 launch of Kosmos 2481, another Rodnik.[6]
See also
- List of Kosmos satellites (2251–2500)
References
- ^ a b "Strela-3M (14F132)". Gunter Dirk Krebs. 2012. Retrieved 2012-08-10.
- ^ Testoyedov, Nikolay (2015-05-18). "Space Navigation in Russia: History of Development" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-07-16. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
- ^ a b "2013-001". Zarya. n.d. Retrieved 2013-04-28.
- ^ "Trio of Russian military satellites launched by Rockot". Spaceflight Now. 2013-01-15. Retrieved 2013-04-28.
- ^ "Russia replenishes classified satellite network". Russian Space Web. 2013-01-17. Retrieved 2013-04-28.
- ^ "Rodnik military communications satellites". russianspaceweb.com. Retrieved May 8, 2023.
- v
- t
- e
- Kosmos 2482, Kosmos 2483, Kosmos 2484
- JSE Reda 4, Jissho Eisei
- STSat-2C
- TDRS-11
- Intelsat 27
- Globalstar M078, M087, M093, M094, M095, M096
- Azerspace-1/Africasat-1a, Amazonas 3
- Progress M-18M
- Landsat 8
- SARAL, Sapphire, NEOSSat, UniBRITE-1, TUGSAT-1, AAUSat-3, STRaND-1
- Anik G1
- Bion-M No.1 (Aist 2, BeeSat-2, BeeSat-3, SOMP, Dove-2, OSSI-1)
- Cygnus Mass Simulator, Dove 1, Alexander, Graham, Bell
- Progress M-19M
- Gaofen 1, TurkSat-3USat, NEE-01 Pegaso, CubeBug-1
- Kosmos 2485
- IRNSS-1A
- Uragan-M 48, 49, 50
- Shijian XI-05
- MUOS-2
- Shijian 15, Shiyan 7, Chuangxin 3
- Inmarsat-4A F4, INSAT-3D
- Progress M-20M
- Kounotori 4 (TechEdSat-3, ArduSat-1, ArduSat-X, PicoDragon)
- USA-244
- Arirang-5
- USA-245
- Eutelsat 25B / Es'hail 1, GSAT-7 / INSAT-4F
- Amos-4
- Yaogan 17 A, B, C
- LADEE
- Gonets-M No.5, Gonets-M No.6, Gonets-M No.7
- Hisaki
- USA-246
- Cygnus Orb-D1
- Fengyun III-03
- Kuaizhou-1
- Soyuz TMA-10M
- CASSIOPE, CUSat, POPACS 1, 2, 3, DANDE
- Astra 2E
- Shijian 16
- Sirius FM-6
- Yaogan 18
- Mars Orbiter Mission
- Soyuz TMA-11M
- Globus-1M No.13L
- MAVEN
- ORS-3, STPSat-3, Black Knight 1, CAPE-2, ChargerSat-1, COPPER, DragonSat-1, Firefly (satellite), Ho'oponopono-2, Horus, KySat-2, NPS-SCAT, ORSES, ORS Tech 1, 2, PhoneSat 2.4, Prometheus × 8, SENSE A, B, SwampSat, TJ3Sat, Trailblazer-1, Vermont Lunar CubeSat
- Yaogan 19
- DubaiSat-2, STSAT-3, SkySat-1, UniSat-5 (Dove 4, ICube-1, HumSat-D, PUCP-Sat 1 (Pocket-PUCP), BeakerSat-1, $50SAT, QBScout-1, WREN), AprizeSat 7, 8, Lem, WNISat-1, GOMX-1, CubeBug-2, Delfi-n3Xt, Dove 3, First-MOVE, FUNcube-1, HINCube-1, KHUSat-1, KHUSat-2, NEE-02 Krysaor, OPTOS, Triton 1, UWE-3, VELOX-P2, ZACUBE-1, BPA-3
- Swarm A, B, C
- Shiyan 5
- Progress M-21M
- Chang'e 3 (Yutu)
- SES-8
- USA-247 / Topaz, TacSat-6
- Inmarsat-5 F1
- CBERS-3†
- Gaia
- Túpac Katari 1
- Kosmos 2488 / Strela-3M 7, Kosmos 2489 / Strela-3M 8, Kosmos 2490 / Strela-3M 9, Kosmos-2491
- Ekspress AM5
- Aist 1, Kosmos 2491 / SKRL-756 1, Kosmos 2492 / SKRL-756 2
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).