Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Russia launches military satellite into space by Proton Rocket
A Russian Proton rocket hauled a military communications satellite into orbit on 28th February,. The three-stage Proton booster, topped by a Block DM upper stage, blasted off at 0410 GMT (11:10 p.m. EST Friday) from Complex 81 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
The rocket's Block DM upper stage completed several burns to place mission's payload into a geosynchronous transfer orbit stretching from an altitude of approximately 136 miles to a high point of about 22,000 miles.
The payload, believed to be a Raguda military communications satellite, separated from the Block DM at 1046 GMT (5:46 a.m. EST), successfully punctuating the six-and-a-half hour mission, according to Russian defense officials.
Raguda satellites are also known as the Globus series. The craft operate in geosynchronous orbit 22,300 miles above the planet to relay critical communications between troops and military leaders.
Saturday's launch was the second Proton mission of 2009, coming two-and-a-half weeks after another Proton rocket delivered two Russian civil communications satellites into space.
The next Proton flight is scheduled for 28th March to launch the W2A communications satellite for Eutelsat.
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