Kosmos 2442 (Russian: Космос 2442 meaning Cosmos 2442) is one of a set of three set of three Russian military satellites launched in 2008 as part of the GLONASS satellite navigation system. It was launched with Kosmos 2443 and Kosmos 2444.
Mission type | Navigation |
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Operator | Russian Space Forces |
COSPAR ID | 2008-046A[1] |
SATCAT no. | 33378[1] |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | GC 724 |
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] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | September 25, 2008, 08:49 (2008-09-25UTC08:49Z) UTC |
Rocket | Proton-M/DM-2[2] |
Launch site | Baikonur 81/24 |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Medium Earth orbit[3] |
This satellites is a GLONASS-M satellite, also known as Uragan-M, and is numbered Uragan-M No. 724.[1]
Kosmos 2442/3/4 were launched from Site 81/23 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 08:49 UTC on 25 September 2008. The launch successfully placed the satellites into Medium Earth orbit. It subsequently received its Kosmos designation, and the international designators 2008-046A. The United States Space Command assigned it the Satellite Catalog Number 33378.[1]
It is currently part of the GLONASS constellation in the third orbital plane, orbital slot 18. It started operation on 26 October 2008.[4][5]
← 2007 · Orbital launches in 2008 · 2009 → | |
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Thuraya 3 | TecSAR | Ekspress AM-33 | Progress M-63 | STS-122 (Columbus) | Thor 5 | Kizuna | Jules Verne ATV | STS-123 (Kibō ELM-PS · Dextre · Spacelab MD002) | USA-200 | AMC-14 | USA-201 | DirecTV-11 | SAR-Lupe 4 | Soyuz TMA-12 | ICO G1 | C/NOFS | Vinasat-1 · Star One C2 | Tianlian I-01 | GIOVE-B | Cartosat-2A · TWSAT · CanX-2 · CUTE-1.7 + APD II · Delfi-C3 · AAUSat-2 · Compass-1 · SEEDS-2 · CanX-6 · Rubin-8 | Amos-3 | Progress M-64 | Galaxy 18 | Kosmos 2437 · Kosmos 2438 · Kosmos 2439 · Yubileiny | Feng Yun 3A | STS-124 (Kibō PM) | ChinaSat 9 | Fermi | Skynet 5C · Türksat 3A | Orbcomm FM29 · Orbcomm FM37 · Orbcomm FM38 · Orbcomm FM39 · Orbcomm FM40 · Orbcomm FM41 | OSTM/Jason-2 | Kosmos 2440 | Badr-6 · ProtoStar 1 | EchoStar XI | SAR-Lupe 5 | Kosmos 2441 | Trailblazer · NanoSail-D · PRESat · Explorers | Superbird-C2 · AMC-21 | Omid | Inmarsat-4 F3 | Tachys · Mati · Choma · Choros · Trochia | Huan Jing 1A · Huan Jing 1B | GeoEye-1 | Progress M-65 | Nimiq-4 | Galaxy 19 | Kosmos 2442 · Kosmos 2243 · Kosmos 2444 | Shenzhou 7 (Banxing-1) | Ratsat | THEOS | Soyuz TMA-13 | IBEX | Chandrayaan-1 (MIP) | Shijian 6E · Shijian 6F | COSMO-3 | Venesat-1 | Chuang Xin 1B · Shiyan Weixing 3 | Astra 1M | Kosmos 2445 | STS-126 (Leonardo MPLM · PSSC-1) | Progress M-01M | Yaogan 4 | Kosmos 2446 | Yaogan 5 | Hot Bird 9 · Eutelsat W2M | Feng Yun 2E | Kosmos 2447 · Kosmos 2448 · Kosmos 2449 | |
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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