Kosmos 1805
Kosmos 1805 (Russian: Космос 1805 meaning Cosmos 1805) was a Soviet electronic intelligence satellite which was launched in 1986.[1] The first of four Tselina-R satellites to fly, it was constructed by Yuzhnoye with its ELINT payload manufactured by TsNII-108 GKRE.[2] Since it ceased operations it has remained in orbit as space junk, and in April 2012 NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope was forced to manoeuvre to avoid a collision with the derelict satellite.[1]
Kosmos 1805 was launched at 07:30 UTC on December 10, 1986 atop a Tsyklon-3 rocket flying from Site 32/2 at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome.[3] Following its successful launch, the satellite was given its Kosmos designation, along with international designator 1986-097A, and Satellite Catalog Number 17191.[4] By 9 January 1987, the satellite was in an orbit with a perigee of 634 kilometres (394 mi), an apogee of 662 kilometres (411 mi), 82.5 degrees of inclination,[5] and an orbital period of 97.68 minutes.[6]
On April 30, 2013, it was announced that Fermi space observatory narrowly avoided a collision with Kosmos 1805 one year previous, in April 2012. Orbital predictions several days earlier indicated that the two satellites were expected to occupy the same point in space within 30 milliseconds of each other. On April 3, 2012 telescope operators decided to stow the satellite's high-gain parabolic antenna, rotate the solar panels out of the way and to fire Fermi's rocket thrusters for one second to move it out of the way. Even though the thrusters had been idle since the telescope had been placed in orbit nearly five years earlier, they worked correctly. After the danger was past, Fermi initiated a one second thruster burn to return to position.[1]
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| Kosmos 1715 | Kosmos 1716 · Kosmos 1717 · Kosmos 1718 · Kosmos 1719 · Kosmos 1720 · Kosmos 1721 · Kosmos 1722 · Kosmos 1723 | STS-61-C (Satcom K1) | Kosmos 1724 | Kosmos 1725 | Kosmos 1726 | Gran' No.29L | Kosmos 1727 | Kosmos 1728 | STS-51-L ( TDRS-B · SPARTAN-203) | Shiyong Tongbu Tongxin Weixing 1 | Kosmos 1729 | Kosmos 1730 | Kosmos 1731 | USA-15 · USA-16 · USA-17 · USA-18 | Kosmos 1732 | Yuri 2b | Mir / Core | Kosmos 1733 | SPOT-1 · Viking | Kosmos 1734 | Kosmos 1735 | Soyuz T-15 | Progress 25 | Kosmos 1736 | Kosmos 1737 | Unnamed | GStar-2 · Brasilsat A2 | Kosmos 1738 | Kosmos 1739 | Kosmos 1740 | Kosmos 1741 | KH-9 No.1220 · Pearl Ruby | Molniya-3 No.43 | Progress 26 | GOES-G | Kosmos 1742 | Kosmos 1743 | Soyuz TM-1 | Kosmos 1744 | Kosmos 1745 | Ekran No.30L | Meteor-2 No.18 | Kosmos 1746 | Kosmos 1747 | Intelsat VA F-14 | Kosmos 1748 · Kosmos 1749 · Kosmos 1750 · Kosmos 1751 · Kosmos 1752 · Kosmos 1753 · Kosmos 1754 · Kosmos 1755 | Kosmos 1756 | Gorizont No.24L | Kosmos 1757 | Kosmos 1758 | Kosmos 1759 | Kosmos 1760 | Molniya-3 No.44 | Kosmos 1761 | Kosmos 1762 | Kosmos 1763 | Kosmos 1764 | Kosmos 1765 | Kosmos 1766 | Kosmos 1767 | Molniya-1 No.59 | Kosmos 1768 | Kosmos 1769 | Kosmos 1770 | Ajisai · Fuji 1a · Jindai | Kosmos 1771 | Kosmos 1772 | Kosmos 1773 | Kosmos 1774 | Kosmos 1775 | Kosmos 1776 | Molniya-1 No.57 | USA-19 | Kosmos 1777 | Kosmos 1778 · Kosmos 1779 · Kosmos 1780 | Kosmos 1781 | NOAA-10 | Kosmos 1782 | Kosmos 1783 | Fanhui Shi Weixing 9 | Kosmos 1784 | Unnamed | Kosmos 1785 | Molniya-3 No.41 | Kosmos 1786 | Kosmos 1787 | Gran' No.30L | Kosmos 1788 | Kosmos 1789 | Kosmos 1790 | Kosmos 1791 | Kosmos 1792 | Polar Bear | Molniya-1 No.60 | Gorizont No.22L | Kosmos 1793 | Kosmos 1794 · Kosmos 1795 · Kosmos 1796 · Kosmos 1797 · Kosmos 1798 · Kosmos 1799 · Kosmos 1800 · Kosmos 1801 | Kosmos 1802 | Mech-K No.303 | Kosmos 1803 | Kosmos 1804 | USA-20 | Kosmos 1805 | Kosmos 1806 | Kosmos 1807 | Kosmos 1808 | Kosmos 1809 | Kosmos 1810 | Molniya-1 No.62 | | Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Manned flights are indicated in bold text. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in (brackets). |
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