Oko
Oko (Old Éwn malábó:Langx)Éwn malábó:Efn chì yà Russian ì chẹ (previously Soviet) kì che-ewn bòm̀bu ku ma nẹ dìdẹ olama ẹgba early warning ku ma che kpì amà-ewn ẹ̀gìnì ya satellites efu Molniya kpaì geosynchronous orbits. Oko satellites mà dú tene-ewn yà í ballistic missiles lúgbo ẹlẹ mù mòjì-o‘ojì abù kì ẹngìnìn ma dẹ̀' exhaust plume efu infrared ùná ,kpaì ùgbojì amà-ewn ẹkubo kú má chẹ,kì chamì Voronezh, Daryal kpaì and Dnepr radars. Yà kìa ná kòhì-ùn ma lúgbo amìamì-rwn nì sensors kù má dú chẹkwù yé í A-135 anti-ballistic missile system kù má dú gbéju Moscow. Ì satellites kì dé chì amì Russian Aerospace Forces nì óda-ewn kpaí yé ì previously t Russian Aerospace Defence Forces and Russian Space Forces.kwefu ochú ẹ́kẹ́gwẹ́kaa efú ọdọ 2015, ma dú kojì kpayì EKS ẹtìtò .[1]
Ò‘hìla-ewn.
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]Development of the Oko system began in the early 1970s under the design bureau headed by AI Savin, which became TsNII Kometa. The spacecraft element was designed by NPO Lavochkin.[2] The first satellite was launched in 1972[3] but it was not until 1978 that the overall system became operational and 1982 before it was placed on combat duty.[2] The system had a major malfunction in 1983 when it mistakenly identified sunlight on high altitude clouds as a missile attack. Stanislav Petrov, on duty at the new control centre in Serpukhov-15, Moscow Oblast, discounted the warning due to the newness of the system and the lack of corroboration from ground-based radar.[4]
The vast majority of the satellites launched (86 out of 100 as of March 2012[5]) have been the first generation US-K satellites which operate in molniya orbits. Seven first generation satellites were launched into geosynchronous orbits, called US-KS, starting in 1975.[6] A decree of 3 September 1979 led to the creation of the second generation satellites US-KMO which had their first launch in 1991.[2] In total, 101 satellites have been launched.
The US-K satellites, were launched by Molniya-M launch vehicles with Blok 2BL upper stages from Plesetsk Cosmodrome. The US-KS and US-KMO operate in geosynchronous orbits and were launched by Proton with DM-2 upper stages from Baikonur.[5][7]
The last US-KMO satellite (Kosmos 2479) was launched on 30 March 2012[8] and the last US-K satellite (Kosmos 2469) on 30 September 2010.[9] They are due to be replaced by a new system called EKS.
Debris
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]The first generation Molniya-type orbit Oko satellites launched between 1976 and 1983 were prone to disintegration, resulting in extensive space debris. The reason they broke up was because they each carried an on-board explosive charge that would be used to destroy the satellite in the case of a malfunction. Unfortunately, control of the explosive charge was itself unreliable and it would often explode, rendering the satellite inoperative, while it was still under control. The design was eventually changed, and the explosive charge in Kosmos 1481 was the last to explode early.[10]
Facilities
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]The system has two dedicated control centres. The western centre is at Serpukhov-15 (Éwn malábó:Lang-rus) near Kurilovo outside Moscow[11] (55°04′06″N 37°02′29″E / 55.06833°N 37.04139°E) and the eastern centre is at Pivan-1 (Éwn malábó:Lang-rus)[12] (50°20′57″N 137°11′22″E / 50.34917°N 137.18944°E) in the Russian Far East. The centre at Serpukhov-15 burned down in 2001[13][14] which caused the loss of contact with currently orbiting satellites.[15]
See also
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]- Defense Support Program
- Space-Based Infrared System
- EKS, the new system replacing the entire Oko program.
Notes
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]- ↑ "Soyuz 2-1B launches EKS-1 to upgrade Russian Early Warning System". 17 ochu ekegwa–oka 2015. Archived from the original on 20 ochu ekegwe–eji 2015. Retrieved 17 ochu ekegwe–eji 2015.
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References
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]
External links
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]- Pages with reference errors
- CS1 errors: archive-url
- CS1 maint: date format
- Articles with short description
- Use British English from November 2021
- Articles with invalid date parameter in template
- Use dmy dates from November 2021
- Oko
- Early warning systems
- Missile defense
- Reconnaissance satellites of Russia
- Reconnaissance satellites of the Soviet Union
- Early warning satellites
- Military equipment introduced in the 1970s
- Spacecraft that broke apart in space