5 Apr: The rendezvous proximity operations between Cosmos 2581 (62902) and Cosmos 2582 (62903) continued. Here is the analysis we did for the Flash on 9 Mar 2025 which details the interactions between the three satellites from 13 Feb through 7 Mar 2025. This article details what we’ve seen from 8 Mar through 6 Apr 2025. Of note, Cosmos 2582 appears to be doing all of the maneuvering while Cosmos 2581 remains in its natural orbit. For its part 2583 has conducted limited maneuvers but is believed to have released an object (cataloged as “Object F” <63330>) on 18 Mar. This article is based solely on TLE data available on Celestrak.org, reporting provided by the Joint Commercial Operations (JCO) cell and orbit visualization from Space Cockpit.
Timeline:
- 6-8 Mar: Cosmos 2581 & 2582 are separating at an approximate rate of 5 km/day. Satellites are separated by ~6.5km.
- 9 Mar: Cosmos 2581 & 2582 continue to separate, now ~18.8km apart.
- 10 Mar: Cosmos 2582 maneuvers and range to 2581 decreases to ~9.7km and closing.
- 11 Mar: Cosmos 2582 has a close approach of <2km with 2581.
- 12-15 Mar: Cosmos 2582 has periodic close approaches of <1km with 2581.
- 16 Mar: Cosmos 2582 maneuvers to increase separation with 2581. Object separation grows to >120km. Later on 16 Mar, Cosmos 2582 maneuvers again to begin closing with 2581.
- 17-19 Mar: Cosmos 2582 reduces separation with 2581 from >120km to ~3.4km.
- 20 Mar: Cosmos 2582 again maneuvers to reduce distance with 2581. JCO predicts maneuver will result in <1km RPO between the 2 satellites.
- 21- 27 Mar: Separation between Cosmos 2582 and 2581 declines from ~20.8km to ~2.2km. Cosmos 2582 continues to close with 2581.
- 28 Mar – 6 Apr: Cosmos 2582 conducts RPO with Cosmos 2582 and is continuously within 1km.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D67dg9P3eDY