Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kosmos 7 (Russian: Космос 7 meaning Cosmos 7), also known as Zenit-2 No.4 and occasionally in the West as Sputnik 17 was a Soviet reconnaissance satellite launched in 1962. It was the seventh satellite to be designated under the Kosmos system, and the second successful launch of a Soviet reconnaissance satellite.
The Challenge (Russian: Вызов, romanized: Vyzov) is a 2023 Russian space drama film co-written and directed by Klim Shipenko.Filmed on the International Space Station (ISS), it is the first fictional, feature-length film featuring actors to be shot in space.
A/S Kosmos was a shipping and industrial company from Sandefjord. It was founded in 1928 by Anders Jahre , Svend Foyn Bruun, Sr. and Anton Barth von der Lippe [ 1 ] as Hvalfangstselskapet Kosmos A/S .
Kosmos 1267 (Russian: Космос 1267 meaning Cosmos 1267), also known as TKS-2, was an unmanned TKS spacecraft which docked to the Soviet space station Salyut 6 as part of tests to attach scientific expansion modules to stations in Earth orbit. The module which docked to the station was the FGB component of a TKS vehicle launched on April 25 ...
The film was made in Birmingham, England. [2] Pre-production started in 2013 followed by principal photography in 2015. The film took five years to make and was shot on the Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 1080p. [3] Other than the soundtrack, the Weavers handled the majority of post-production duties themselves. [4] It is their feature film ...
Cosmos (Turkish: Kosmos) is a 2010 Turkish-Bulgarian drama film, written and directed by Reha Erdem, starring Sermet Yeşil [az; tr] as a thief and a miracle worker who is welcomed into a tiny, snowbound border village after resuscitating a half-drowned boy.
Kosmos (Russian: Ко́смос, IPA:, [1] meaning "(outer) space" or "Kosmos") is a designation given to many satellites operated by the Soviet Union and subsequently Russia. Kosmos 1 , the first spacecraft to be given a Kosmos designation, was launched on 16 March 1962.
The Soyuz‑2.1v was designed to serve lighter payloads with a payload capacity of 2,850 kg (6,280 lb) to a 200 km (120 mi) circular low Earth orbit with an inclination of 51.8° from Baikonur, and 2,800 kg (6,200 lb) to a 200 kilometre orbit at 62.8° from Plesetsk.