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Kosmos Airlines departing from Moscow-Vnukovo. Kosmos Airlines was founded in 1995 as Aviacompany Kosmos. In 2001 it was renamed to Kosmos Airlines. It was operating in its Russian destinations as well as having passenger and cargo services.
Kosmos 777 was the second spacecraft of the Cosmos 699-type to experience a fragmentation. There may have been two fragmentation events on the day it first broke apart. It created dozens of pieces of debris that could not be tracked. [1] Kosmos 778: Parus: 4 November 1975 10:13: Kosmos-3M 11K65M: Navigation, Communication: in orbit: Kosmos 779 ...
Kosmos 8, also known as Sputnik 18, was launched on 18 August 1962 at 05:02:00 GMT from Kapustin Yar. Orbital mass 337 kg. It was a Soviet DS (Dnepropetrovsk Sputnik) type military satellite built in Ukraine for launch by Kosmos launch vehicles. It was used for military and scientific research and component proving tests. [4]
The designation Kosmos (Russian: Космос meaning Cosmos) is a generic name given to a large number of Soviet Union, and subsequently Russian, satellites, the first of which was launched in 1962. Satellites given Kosmos designations include military spacecraft, failed probes to the Moon and the planets, prototypes for crewed spacecraft, and ...
This is a list of Kosmos satellites. Due to its size, the list has been split into groups of 250 satellites: List of Kosmos satellites (1–250) List of Kosmos satellites (251–500) List of Kosmos satellites (501–750) List of Kosmos satellites (751–1000) List of Kosmos satellites (1001–1250) List of Kosmos satellites (1251–1500)
CASTAIC, California (Reuters) -A new wildfire that broke out north of Los Angeles on Wednesday rapidly spread to more than 8,000 acres (32 square km), fueled by strong winds and dry brush, forcing ...
Kosmos 4 was a Zenit-2 satellite, a first generation, low resolution reconnaissance satellite derived from the Vostok spacecraft used for crewed flights. [1] It was the fourth satellite to be designated under the Kosmos system, and the second Soviet attempt to launch a reconnaissance satellite, the previous attempt having failed after one of the Vostok-K engines shut down prematurely, on 11 ...
Kosmos 96 (Russian: Космос 96 meaning Cosmos 96), or 3MV-4 No.6, was a Soviet spacecraft intended to explore Venus. A 3MV-4 spacecraft launched as part of the Venera programme, Kosmos 96 was to have made a flyby of Venus. However, due to a launch failure, it did not depart low Earth orbit.