Kosmos 2432 (Russian: Космос 2432 meaning Cosmos 2432) is one of a set of three Russian military satellites launched in 2007 as part of the GLONASS satellite navigation system. It was launched with Kosmos 2431 and Kosmos 2433.
Mission type | Navigation |
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Operator | Russian Space Forces |
COSPAR ID | 2007-052B[1] |
SATCAT no. | 32276[1] |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | GC 719 |
Spacecraft type | Uragan-M |
Manufacturer | Reshetnev ISS[2] |
Launch mass | 1415 kg[2] |
Dimensions | 1.3 m diameter[2] |
Power | 1540 watts[2] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | October 26, 2007, 07:35 (2007-10-26UTC07:35Z) UTC |
Rocket | Proton-K/DM-2[1] |
Launch site | Baikonur, Site 81/24 |
Entered service | 27 November 2007 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Medium Earth orbit[3] |
Slot | 20 |
This satellite is a GLONASS-M satellite, also known as Uragan-M, and is numbered Uragan-M No. 719.[1]
Kosmos 2431 / 2432 / 2433 were launched from Site 81/24 at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. A Proton-K carrier rocket with a Blok DM upper stage was used to perform the launch which took place at 07:35 UTC on 26 October 2007. The launch successfully placed the satellites into Medium Earth orbit. It subsequently received its Kosmos designation, and the International Designator 2007-052B. The United States Space Command assigned it the Satellite Catalog Number 32276.[1]
It is part of the GLONASS constellation, in the third plane, orbital slot 20. It started operation on 27 November 2007.[4]·[5]
← 2006 · Orbital launches in 2007 · 2008 → | |
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Cartosat-2 · SRE-1 · Lapan-TUBsat · Pehuensat-1 | Progress M-59 | NSS-8 | Beidou-1D | THEMIS A · THEMIS B · THEMIS C · THEMIS D · THEMIS E | IGS Radar 2 · IGS Optical 3V | ASTRO · NEXTSat · MidSTAR-1 · FalconSAT-3 · STPSat-1 · CFESat | Skynet 5A · INSAT-4B | DemoFlight 2 | Soyuz TMA-10 | Anik F3 | Hai Yang 1B | Compass-M1 | EgyptSat 1 · Saudisat-3 · SaudiComsat-3 · SaudiComsat-4 · SaudiComsat-5 · SaudiComsat-6 · SaudiComsat-7 · CP-3 · CP-4 · CAPE-1 · Libertad 1 · AeroCube 2 · CSTB-1 · MAST | AGILE · AAM | NFIRE | AIM | Astra 1L · Galaxy 17 | Progress M-60 | NigComSat-1 | Yaogan 2 · Zheda PiXing 1 | Globalstar 65 · Globalstar 69 · Globalstar 71 · Globalstar 72 | Sinosat-3 | Kosmos 2427 | COSMO-1 | STS-117 (ITS S3/4) | Ofek-7 | TerraSAR-X | USA-194 | Genesis II | Kosmos 2428 | SAR-Lupe 2 | zhongxing 6B | DirecTV-10 | Progress M-61 | Phoenix | STS-118 (ITS S5 · SpaceHab LSM) | Spaceway-3 · BSAT-3a | INSAT-4CR | JCSAT-11 | Kosmos 2429 | Kaguya (Okina · Ouna) | Foton-M No.3 · YES2 | WorldView-1 | CBERS-2B | Dawn | Intelsat 11 · Optus D2 | Soyuz TMA-11 | USA-195 | USA-196 | Globalstar 66 · Globalstar 67 · Globalstar 78 · Globalstar 70 | Kosmos 2430 | STS-120 (Harmony) | Chang'e 1 | Kosmos 2431 · Kosmos 2432 · Kosmos 2433 | SAR-Lupe 3 · Rubin-7 | USA-197 | Yaogan 3 | Skynet 5B · Star One C1 | Sirius 4 | Globus-1M No.11L | COSMO-2 | USA-198 | Radarsat-2 | USA-199 | Horizons-2 · Rascom-QAF 1 | Progress M-62 | Kosmos 2434 · Kosmos 2435 · Kosmos 2436 | |
Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Crewed flights are indicated in underline. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in brackets. |
GLONASS satellites | |
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GLONASS |
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GLONASS-M |
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GLONASS-K1 |
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