Issue 113

Russia: VLEO Update

Russia's Cosmos 2577 ( still unnamed in Spacetrack.org catalog but probably 61179 ) may have experienced an on-orbit failure as the satellite appears to be no longer performing maneuvers to maintain its altitude. By contrast, Cosmos 2578 (also unnamed but likely 61180) continues to maneuver regularly. As a result the…

Russia’s Cosmos 2577 (still unnamed in Spacetrack.org catalog but probably 61179) may have experienced an on-orbit failure as the satellite appears to be no longer performing maneuvers to maintain its altitude. By contrast, Cosmos 2578 (also unnamed but likely 61180) continues to maneuver regularly. As a result the two spacecraft have begun to diverge. For the first several weeks the two satellites orbited relatively close to one another, however this appears to have changed in mid-December.

– Russia launched Cosmos 2577 and 2578 on 17 Sep 2024 from Plesetsk on an Angara 1.2. Russia placed both satellites into a sun synchronous orbit which is typical for imagery satellites. Both are operating at a low altitude of 339x322km and inclination 96.77°.

– Cosmos 2577/2578 are nearly co-planar with Cosmos 2574 (58658) and Cosmos 2575 (58929).

– Per Bart Hendrickx, “ until mid-December, when Kosmos-2578 started performing regular burns to maintain a mean altitude just under 300 km. Kosmos-2577’s orbit, however, has continued to decay and the satellite is now flying more than 10 km below Kosmos-2578 (278×289 km vs. 290×301 km). Possibly, some kind of on-board failure is preventing it from countering its orbital decay, but it’s too early to draw any definitive conclusions. The first three satellites believed to have belonged to this series (Kosmos-2551, 2555, 2560) showed similar behavior, re-entering only months after launch without having made any obvious maneuvers. It’s not known if this was intended or not.