Luch-2 1

Launch Success

Liftoff Time (GMT)

16:25:59

Wednesday October 11, 1995

Mission Details

Luch-2 1

Wiki

The Luch or Altair satellites were the first generation of Soviet and later Russian data relay satellites. These satellites provided communications service to the Mir space station, Buran space shuttle, Soyuz-TM spacecraft, military satellites and the TsUPK ground control center. Luch was built by NPO-PM based on their KAUR-4 3-axis stabilized geostationary satellite platform, which featured plasma station-keeping engines and hydrazine monopropellant orientation engines. The 2400 kg satellites featured three large antennas and numerous, small helical antennas permitted data relays in the 15/14, 15/11, and 0.9/0.7 GHz bands. Each satellite was equipped with three Arion transponders by NPO Radiopribor for data transmission. The design life was five years. Beginning in 1995, four satellites were launched. The first three were operated under the designations Cosmos 1700, Cosmos 1897 and Cosmos 2054. The Kosmos designator was dropped for the fourth satellite, which was simply refered as Luch 1. A fifth satellite was never launched.

Geostationary Earth Orbit

1 Payload

2,420 kilograms

Rocket

Retired
Proton K/Block-DM-2

Active 1982 to 2012

Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center logo

Manufacturer

Khrunichev

Rocket

Height: 57.64m

Payload to Orbit

LEO: 19,000 kg

GTO: 2,400 kg

Liftoff Thrust

9,548 Kilonewtons

Fairing

Diameter: 4.35m

Height: 10.4m

Stages

4

Launch Site

Site 81/23

Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan

Fastest Turnaround

11 days 23 hours

Stats

Proton-K


230th

Mission

5th

Mission of 1995

1995


59th

Orbital launch attempt