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A Tsiklon 3 unsuccessfully launched
six satellites from Plesetsk
Cosmodrome at 18:57 UTC on December 28. The rocket was carrying
three Gonets-D1 satellites for Rosaviakosmos and three Strela 3
military satellites for the Russian Ministry of Defense. The
mission orbit was 1,400 km (756 nmi) inclined at 82.6 degrees.
The first and second stages of the
booster rocket performed normally, and the third stage ignited the
first time as scheduled. Early telemetry analysis indicates that
an order to shut down the engines was issued by the flight
computer at 367 seconds into flight, at an altitude of 190 km (103
nmi), preventing the six satellites from reaching orbital
velocity. The
satellites reentered on Russian territory 58 km (31 nmi) southeast
of Vrangel Island in the East Siberian Sea. The Naval Rescue
Centers in Vladivostok and Murmansk said there were no Russian or
foreign vessels in the crash area.
The mission was
covered by a US$2.5-million insurance policy provided by the
Megaruss insurance group.
NPO Yuzhnoye,
Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine, manufactured the rocket that failed, in
1991. Only three Tsiklon 3 boosters remain available.
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LAUNCH
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| Int'l Designation |
2000
F03
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launch
failure
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| Launch Vehicle
Model |
Tsiklon
3
|
|
| Date / Time (UTC) |
December
28, 2000
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18:57
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| Spaceport / Pad |
Xlichang
Satellite Launch Center
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SATELLITE(S)
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| Name(s) |
Gonets
D1
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| |
Kosmos
(Strela 3)
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Financial
|
| Launch cost |
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| Web Links |
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