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.
Mission type | Navigation |
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Operator | Russian Space Forces |
COSPAR ID | 2009-070C[1] |
SATCAT no. | 36113[1] |
Spacecraft properties | |
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] |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | December 14, 2009, 10:38 (2009-12-14UTC10:38Z) UTC |
Rocket | Proton-M/DM-2[2] |
Launch site | Baikonur 81/24 |
Orbital parameters | |
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] |
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]
← 2008 · Orbital launches in 2009 · 2010 → | |
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USA-202 | Ibuki · SDS-1 · Sohla-1 · Raijin · Kagayaki · Hitomi · Kukai · Kiseki | Koronas-Foton | Omid | NOAA-19 | Progress M-66 | Ekspress-AM44 · Ekspress MD1 | Hot Bird 10 · NSS-9 · Spirale-A · Spirale-B | OCO | Telstar 11N | Raduga-1 | Kepler | STS-119 (ITS S6) | GOCE | USA-203 | Soyuz TMA-14 | Eutelsat W2A | USA-204 | Kwangmyŏngsŏng-2 | Compass-G2 | RISAT-2 · ANUSAT | SICRAL 1B | Yaogan 6 | Kosmos 2450 | USA-205 | Progress M-02M | STS-125 | Herschel · Planck | ProtoStar 2 | TacSat-3 · PharmaSat · AeroCube-3 · HawkSat-1 · CP6 | Meridian 2 | Soyuz TMA-15 | LRO · LCROSS | MEASAT-3a | GOES 14 | Sirius FM-5 | 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 | AsiaSat 5 | USA-206 | JCSAT-RA · Optus D3 | STSAT-2A | STS-128 (Leonardo MPLM) | Palapa-D | USA-207 | HTV-1 | Meteor-M No.1 · Universitetsky-Tatyana-2 · Sterkh-2 · UGATUSAT · BLITS · SumbandilaSat · Iris | Nimiq 5 | Oceansat-2 · BeeSat-1 · UWE-2 · ITU-pSat1 · SwissCube-1 · Rubin 9.1 · Rubin 9.2 | USA-208 · USA-209 | Soyuz TMA-16 | Amazonas-2 · COMSATBw-1 | WorldView-2 | Progress M-03M | USA-210 | Thor 6 · NSS-12 | SMOS · PROBA-2 | Progress M-MIM2 (Poisk) | Shijian 11-01 | STS-129 (ExPRESS-1 · ExPRESS-2) | Kosmos 2455 | Intelsat 14 | Eutelsat W7 | IGS Optical 3 | Intelsat 15 | USA-211 | Yaogan 7 | Kosmos 2456 · Kosmos 2457 · Kosmos 2458 | Yaogan 8 · Xi Wang 1 | Helios IIB | Soyuz TMA-17 | DirecTV-12 | |
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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