Issue 106

Russia Launches Cosmos 2577 and 2578

17 Sep: Russia launched an Angara 1.2 from Plesetsk carrying two satellites, likely Earth Observation, into Low Earth Orbit. Cosmos 2577 and 2578 (61179, 61180) are both in a sun synchronous orbit which is typical for imagery satellites. Both are operating at a low altitude of 339x322km and inclination 96.77°. Their…

  • 17 Sep: Russia launched an Angara 1.2 from Plesetsk carrying two satellites, likely Earth Observation, into Low Earth Orbit. Cosmos 2577 and 2578 (61179, 61180) are both in a sun synchronous orbit which is typical for imagery satellites. Both are operating at a low altitude of 339x322km and inclination 96.77°. Their flight profile is similar to previous experimental missions, Cosmos 2568 (56091), 2574 (58658) and 2575 (58929). Cosmos 2577/2578 are virtually co-planar with Cosmos 2574/2575. Launch Video.

– Cosmos 2577 and 2578 are likely EO-MKA or OO-MKA imagery satellites. Per posts from Bart Hendryckx: EO-MKA satellites are “Mysterious low-orbiting satellites, four of which are believed to have been launched so far (Kosmos-2551, 2555, 2560 and 2568). The first and fourth went up on a Soyuz-2.1v, the second and third on an Angara-1.2/AM. The first three re-entered after just weeks in orbit without having made any maneuvers. Kosmos-2568, however, suddenly started making orbit corrections several months into its mission and remains in a low orbit under 300 km 1.5 years after its launch.”

– More from Bart: “Here’s a comparison of their initial orbit parameters:

Cosmos-2551: 295×307 km, 96.34°

Cosmos-2555: 278×293 km, 96.45°

Cosmos-2560: 329х344 km, 96.35°

Cosmos-2568: 329×345 km, 96.46°

Cosmos-2577/2578: 328×343, 96.77°

The initial perigee/apogee of the latest four satellites are strikingly similar.”

– “EO is manufactured in the research (“NIR”) phase of a project and can be used to refine the final design (somewhat similar to a prototype) and an OO is manufactured in the development (“OKR”) phase of a project to determine if it can enter production. That would imply that the latest two satellites more closely resemble the operational version of the satellite than the earlier ones.”

– Regarding similarities with Cosmos 2574/2575: Cosmos 2574/75 “are in an orbital plane quite close to that of Cosmos 2577/2578, so there could be a link between these missions, which may imply that Cosmos 2574 and 2575 also belong to the EO MKA/OO MKA series.”

– “One difference is that Cosmos 2574 and 2575 were placed into higher initial orbits (349×360 km)…what they do have in common with Cosmos 2568 is that both are now performing regular burns to maintain an orbit just below 300 km (the mean altitude for both is 293 km).”