DS-1 n°2

Launch Failure

Liftoff Time (GMT)

12:30:00

Thursday December 21, 1961

Mission Details

Launch Notes

The oxidant in the second stage was consumed before orbital velocity could be reached due to uncontrolled pumping of liquid oxygen into the combustion chamber. The upper stage and the satellite crashed on the Kuril Islands.

DS-1 n°2

Wiki

DS satellites are a series of satellites made to be universal, and easily modifiable according to customer needs. After a first launch in 1962, almost two hundred satellites will be launched. Several generations of DS satellites will be developed, some used for scientific studies, while others will be used by the Red Army for radar calibration. After flying two demonstration series (DS-1 and DS-2), the DS satellites will have three universal versions (DS-U1, unstabilized and battery-powered, DS-U2, unstabilized and solar-powered, DS-U3, stabilized). Versions will also be produced to fly international experiments, leading to the Intercosmos program. This flight flew a DS-1 satellite. The DS-1 is the first Soviet satellite which was not built by Sergei Korolyov's OKB-1, but by Mikhail Yanguel's OKB-586. Of very modest size (165 kg), it is mainly intended to test the Cosmos launcher (63S1), which has never yet flown. It is equipped with sensors to measure the stress undergone by a satellite when the launcher separates, as well as its angular velocity. It also has a scientific vocation, since it is equipped with an LZ-7 sensor to measure cosmic rays. This experiment is carried out on behalf of the Institute of Applied Geophysics of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. The DS-1 also has the MBP-1 radio system to transmit its data to the ground.

Low Earth Orbit

1 Payload

165 kilograms

Rocket

Retired
Cosmos-1 (65S3)

Active 1961 to 1967

OKB-586 logo

Manufacturer

OKB-586

Rocket

Height: 29.59m

Payload to Orbit

LEO: 350 kg

GTO: 0 kg

Liftoff Thrust

636 Kilonewtons

Fairing

Diameter: 1.65m

Height: 2.99m

Stages

2

Launch Site

Mayak-2

Kapustin Yar, Russia

Fastest Turnaround

5 days 3 hours

Stats

Cosmos-1


2nd

Mission

2nd

Mission of 1961

OKB-586


29th

Mission

9th

Mission of 1961

1961


49th

Orbital launch attempt