Kosmos 1818

Soviet surveillance satellite
Kosmos 1818
Illustration of Kosmos 1818
Mission typeRadar ocean surveillance
COSPAR ID1987-011A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.17369
Mission duration~ 5 to 6 months
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft typePlazma-A
Launch mass1,500 kilograms (3,307 lb)
Start of mission
Launch dateFebruary 1, 1987, 23:31:00 (1987-02-01UTC23:31Z) UTC
RocketTsyklon-2
Launch siteBaikonur 90
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
Eccentricity0.0016868
Perigee altitude775 kilometres (482 mi)
Apogee altitude799 kilometres (496 mi)
Inclination65.01 degrees
Period100.61 minutes
EpochApril 15, 2014 UTC 00:20:33.89
 

Kosmos 1818 was a nuclear powered Soviet surveillance satellite in the RORSAT program, which monitored NATO vessels using radar. Kosmos 1818 was the first satellite to use the TOPAZ-1 fission reactor. In July 2008, the satellite was damaged, and leaked a trail of sodium coolant.

Description

Kosmos 1818 was launched on February 1, 1987 on a Tsyklon-2 rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. It was put into an orbit about 800 km (500 mi) above the Earth's surface at an inclination of 65° and a period of 100.6 minutes. The satellite had a mission life of about five to six months.[1][2]

The satellite was powered by a TOPAZ 1 nuclear reactor. This was cooled by liquid sodium-potassium, NaK, metal, it used a high-temperature moderator containing hydrogen and highly enriched uranium fuel. It produced electricity using a thermionic converter. It had a Plazma-2 SPT electric engine.[3] Its mission was to search the oceans for naval and merchant vessels, using radar.

Unlike the earlier Soviet RORSAT satellites, Kosmos 1818 and its twin, Kosmos 1867, were launched into high orbits. This mitigated the possibility of mishaps resulting in uncontrolled re-entry of radioactive material, as had occurred with Kosmos 954 and Kosmos 1402, which showered the Earth with radioactive debris.[3]

In 1992, Kosmos 1818 had an approximate visual magnitude of 3.3.[4]

Fragmentation

About July 4, 2008, either Kosmos 1818 was hit by an object or a coolant tube cracked due to thermal stresses by repeated solar heating.[5] The US Space Surveillance Network reported that about thirty objects were formed. These have orbital periods ranging from 100.5 to 101.5 minutes. Some of the debris appears to be metallic spheres. These could have resulted from the NaK coolant.

Russian Space Forces chief of staff General Alexander Yakushin indicated that the debris was high above the orbit of the International Space Station and did not pose any threat of radioactive contamination to the Earth.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Cosmos 1818". Real Time Satellite Tracking. N2YO.com. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  2. ^ "Cosmos 1818". NSSDC Master Catalog Search. NASA. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  3. ^ a b "New Debris Seen from Decommissioned Satellite with Nuclear Power Source" (PDF). Orbital Debris Quarterly News. NASA. 24 January 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2009. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  4. ^ "Spacecraft Particularly Suited for International Participation: Category I". SPACEWARN Bulletin Number 461. NASA. March 25, 1992. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  5. ^ David, Leonard (15 January 2009). "Old Nuclear-Powered Soviet Satellite Acts Up". News. Space.com. Retrieved 31 January 2023.
  6. ^ Isachenkov, Vladimir (21 January 2009), "Russia says old nuclear satellite poses no threat", NBC News
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Nuclear-powered Earth satellites
Examples
  • SNAP-10A
  • Transit-4A
  • Transit-4B
  • Transit 5BN-1
  • Transit 5BN-2
  • Kosmos 198
  • Kosmos 209
  • Kosmos 367
  • Kosmos 402
  • Kosmos 469
  • Kosmos 516
  • Kosmos 626
  • Kosmos 651
  • Kosmos 654
  • Kosmos 723
  • Kosmos 724
  • Kosmos 785
  • Kosmos 860
  • Kosmos 861
  • Kosmos 954
  • Kosmos 1176
  • Kosmos 1249
  • Kosmos 1266
  • Kosmos 1299
  • Kosmos 1365
  • Kosmos 1372
  • Kosmos 1402
  • Kosmos 1607
  • Kosmos 1670
  • Kosmos 1677
  • Kosmos 1682
  • Kosmos 1736
  • Kosmos 1771
  • Kosmos 1818
  • Kosmos 1860
  • Kosmos 1867
  • Kosmos 1900
  • Kosmos 1932
  • LES-8
  • LES-9
Re-entered
See also Category:Nuclear power in space
  • v
  • t
  • e
Orbital launches in 1987
January
  • Meteor-2 No.17
  • Kosmos 1811
  • Kosmos 1812
  • Kosmos 1813
  • Progress 27
  • Kosmos 1814
  • Kosmos 1815
  • Molniya-3 No.42
  • Kosmos 1816
  • Kosmos 1817
February
  • Kosmos 1818
  • Ginga
  • Soyuz TM-2
  • Kosmos 1819
  • USA-21
  • Kosmos 1820
  • Kosmos 1821
  • Momo 1
  • Kosmos 1822
  • Kosmos 1823
  • Kosmos 1824
  • GOES 7
March
  • Progress 28
  • Kosmos 1825
  • Kosmos 1826
  • Kosmos 1827, Kosmos 1828, Kosmos 1829, Kosmos 1830, Kosmos 1831, Kosmos 1832
  • Kosmos 1833
  • Gran' No.31L
  • Palapa B2P
  • SROSS-A
  • FLTSATCOM-6
  • Kvant-1
April
  • Kosmos 1834
  • Kosmos 1835
  • Kosmos 1836
  • Progress 29
  • Kosmos 1837
  • Kosmos 1838, Kosmos 1839, Kosmos 1840
  • Kosmos 1841
  • Kosmos 1842
May
  • Kosmos 1843
  • Gorizont No.23L
  • Kosmos 1844
  • Kosmos 1845
  • USA-22, LIPS-3, USA-23, USA-24, USA-25
  • Polyus
  • Progress 30
  • Kosmos 1846
  • Kosmos 1847
  • Kosmos 1848
June
  • Kosmos 1849
  • Kosmos 1850
  • Kosmos 1851
  • Kosmos 1852, Kosmos 1853, Kosmos 1854, Kosmos 1855, Kosmos 1856, Kosmos 1857, Kosmos 1858, Kosmos 1859
  • Resurs-F1 No.105
  • Kosmos 1860
  • USA-26
  • Kosmos 1861
July
  • Kosmos 1862
  • Kosmos 1863
  • Kosmos 1864
  • Kosmos 1865
  • Kosmos 1866
  • Kosmos 1867
  • Kosmos 1868
  • Kosmos 1869
  • Soyuz TM-3
  • Kosmos 1870
August
  • Kosmos 1871
  • Progress 31
  • Fanhui Shi Weixing 10
  • Meteor-2 No.21
  • Kosmos 1872
  • Kiku No.5
  • Kosmos 1873
September
  • Kosmos 1874
  • Ekran No.29L
  • Kosmos 1875, Kosmos 1876, Kosmos 1877, Kosmos 1878, Kosmos 1879, Kosmos 1880
  • Fanhui Shi Weixing I-01
  • Kosmos 1881
  • Kosmos 1882
  • Aussat A3, ECS-4
  • Kosmos 1883, Kosmos 1884, Kosmos 1885
  • Transit-O 27, Transit-O 29
  • Kosmos 1886
  • Progress 32
  • Kosmos 1887
October
  • Kosmos 1888
  • Kosmos 1889
  • Kosmos 1890
  • Kosmos 1891
  • Kosmos 1892
  • Kosmos 1893
  • USA-27
  • Kosmos 1894
November
December
  • Kosmos 1898
  • Kosmos 1899
  • Gran' No.32L
  • Kosmos 1900
  • Kosmos 1901
  • Kosmos 1902
  • Soyuz TM-4
  • Kosmos 1903
  • Kosmos 1904
  • Kosmos 1905
  • Kosmos 1906
  • Ekran-M No.13L
  • Kosmos 1907
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).