Cosmos 1226

Launch Success

Liftoff Time (GMT)

20:53:00

Wednesday December 10, 1980

Mission Details

Cosmos 1226

Tsikada was a Soviet civilian satellite navigation system used by the Soviet Merchant Marine and Academy of Sciences, but also by the military. It was an equivalent to the purely military Parus system. The Tsikada satellites were very similar to the Parus satellites and also used a NPO PM built pressurized cylindrical bus with gravity-gradient stabilization. The satellites transmitted Doppler-shifted VHF transmissions at around 150 MHz and 400 MHz of their position and orbital characteristics. They operated from a 1000 km orbit with 82.9° inclination. Satellites were placed in planes spaced 45° apart. The development of Tsikada began in 1974 and the first satellite was launched in 1976. The system entered the operational phase in 1978. Also operated in the Tsikada system were the Nadezhda and Nadezhda-M satellites, which featured an additional search and rescue system for locating vessels and aircraft in distress. Beginning in the 1990ies, the Tsikada system was gradually superseded by the Uragan (GLONASS) system.

Low Earth Orbit

1 Payload

820 kilograms

Rocket

Retired
Cosmos-3M

Active 1967 to 2010

OKB-586 logo

Manufacturer

OKB-586

Rocket

Height: 32.42m

Payload to Orbit

LEO: 1,500 kg

GTO: 0 kg

Liftoff Thrust

1,486 Kilonewtons

Fairing

Diameter: 2.44m

Height: 5.72m

Stages

2

Launch Site

Site 132/1

Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russia

Fastest Turnaround

2 days 5 hours

Stats

Cosmos-3


250th

Mission

16th

Mission of 1980

OKB-586


1456th

Mission

85th

Mission of 1980

1980


102nd

Orbital launch attempt