- Kosmos 656
-
Kosmos 656
Космос-656Mission statistics[1] Mission name Kosmos 656
Космос-656Spacecraft type Soyuz 7K-T Spacecraft mass 6,675 kg (14,720 lb) Crew size unmanned Launch vehicle Soyuz Launch pad Gagarin's Start, Baikonur Cosmodrome[1] Launch date 27 May 1974 07:20 UTCLanding 29 May 1974 Mission duration approximately 2.01 days Apogee 364 km (226 mi) Perigee 195 km (121 mi) Orbital period 90.0 minutes Orbital inclination 51.6°
Kosmos 656 (Russian: Космос 656 meaning Cosmos 656) was an unmanned test of the Soyuz 7K-T, a variant of the Soyuz spacecraft. This Soyuz variant was intended for flights to the Almaz military space stations.[1]Mission parameters
- Mass: 6,675 kg (14,720 lb)
- Perigee: 195 km (121 mi)
- Apogee: 364 km (226 mi)
- Inclination: 51.6°
- Period: 90.0 minutes
References
- ^ a b c "Soyuz 7K-T/A9". Astronautix. http://web.archive.org/web/20100103002757/http://astronautix.com/craft/soy7kta9.htm. Retrieved 10 November 2010.
Soyuz programme Soyuz 7K-OK (1967–1971) Soyuz 7K-OKS (1971) Soyuz 7K-T (1973–1981) Soyuz 7K-TM (1974–1976) Soyuz-T (1976–1986) Soyuz-TM (1986–2003) Soyuz-TMA (2003–2012) Soyuz-TMA-M (2010–) Current TMA-02M · TMA-22Planned TMA-03M · TMA-04M · TMA-05M · TMA-06M · TMA-07M · TMA-08M · TMA-09M · TMA-10M · TMA-11M · TMA-12M · TMA-13MUnmanned Kosmos 133 · Kosmos 140 · Kosmos 186 · Kosmos 188 · Kosmos 212 · Kosmos 213 · Kosmos 238 · Soyuz 2 · Kosmos 379 · Kosmos 396 · Kosmos 398 · Kosmos 434 · Kosmos 496 · Kosmos 573 · Kosmos 613 · Kosmos 638 · Kosmos 656 · Kosmos 670 · Kosmos 672 · Kosmos 772 · Soyuz 20 · Kosmos 869 · Kosmos 1001 · Kosmos 1074 · Soyuz T-1 · Soyuz TM-1Categories:- Soviet Union spacecraft stubs
- Kosmos satellites
- Soyuz programme
- 1974 in the Soviet Union
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.