Issue 144

Cosmos 2581 & 2583 RPO within 3m

1 May 2026: COMSPOC_OPS reported that the rendezvous proximity operations between Cosmos 2581, 2582 and 2583 (62902, 62903 & 62904) are continuing. Their latest reporting was specific to a 28 April close approach between Cosmos 2581 and 2583 in which the two objects reportedly were as near as 3m from one another. From COMSPOC_OPS release: Using radar tracking data via @LeoLabs_Space & processed through COMSPOC SSA Suite, COMSPOC_OPS analysts “observed a complex proximity event involving Russian satellites: COSMOS 2581, 2582, 2583, and Object F (a subsatellite released by 2583). The highlight:

1 May 2026: COMSPOC_OPS reported that the rendezvous proximity operations between Cosmos 2581, 2582 and 2583 (62902, 62903 & 62904) are continuing. Their latest reporting was specific to a 28 April close approach between Cosmos 2581 and 2583 in which the two objects reportedly were as near as 3m from one another.

From COMSPOC_OPS release: Using radar tracking data via @LeoLabs_Space & processed through COMSPOC SSA Suite, COMSPOC_OPS analysts “observed a complex proximity event involving Russian satellites: COSMOS 2581, 2582, 2583, and Object F (a subsatellite released by 2583). The highlight: COSMOS 2581 and 2583 achieved a closest approach of ~3 meters on 28 April at UTC, with near-zero relative velocity. This wasn’t a coincidental pass — COSMOS 2583 performed several fine maneuvers to maintain this tight configuration. Meanwhile, COSMOS 2582 trailed the formation at sub-100 km range, while Object F passed within 15 km of 2582 and within 10 km of 2581 — neither maneuvered. For context: in late 2025 to now, we tracked these same COSMOS satellites performing 3-object RPO. These satellites launched 5 February 2025. Whatever Russia is testing, it’s sophisticated.”

Watch COMSPOC_OPS Video.

Screen Capture from COMSPOC_OPS Video Showing Cosmos 2581 & 2583 separated by only 3m (COMSPOC_OPS)