Status
Partial Failure
Cosmos 1714
Sat Dec 28, 1985 09:16 UTC
Fairing separation mechanism failure; the launcher placed the satellite in a lower orbit than expected. Cosmos 1714 couldn't work nominally.
Rocket
Mission Details
Cosmos 1714
Tselina-2 (Russian: Целина) is a Russian, formerly Soviet, military space-based radio surveillance system. It is capable of determining the exact location of radio-emitting objects and also their type, modes of operation, and how active they are. For instance, preparation for a military operation may raise the activity of the radio communications. Detection of these communications by a space-based surveillance system can provide early warning of this activity, warning that may be unavailable by other means.
Based on the first generation Tselina-D ELINT, TSNII-KS at the beginning of the 1970's developed the specifications for an improved model with increased frequency range and on-board method of determining the position of fixed transmitters. The new specification for a universal Army-Navy system called for a satellite with increased mass and lifetime. This would be launched by the Zenit-2 launcher, replacing the separate earlier-generation systems. Data transmission was directly to ground stations via geosynchronous communications satellites.
A total of 137 Tselina satellites were launched, of which 23 Tselina-2 (21 were launched by Zenit, and 2 by Proton).