Kosmos 382 Explained

Kosmos 382
Mission Type:Test Flight
Operator:Soviet Union
Mission Duration:In Orbit:
Launch Date:December 2, 1970, 17:00 UTC
Launch Rocket:Proton K/D 8K82K
Launch Contractor:Soviet Union
Orbit Reference:Geocentric orbit
Orbit Regime:Low Earth Orbit
Orbit Inclination:55.87°
Apsis:gee

Kosmos 382 was a Soviet Soyuz 7K-L1E modification of a Soyuz 7K-L1 "Zond" spacecraft and was successfully test launched into Low Earth Orbit on a Proton rocket designated as (Soyuz 7K-L1E No.2) on December 2, 1970.

The main purpose of the mission was to test the N1/L3 spacecraft's Block D lunar orbit insertion/descent stage by simulating the lunar orbit insertion burn, the lunar orbit circularization burn and the final lunar descent burn. Over the course of five days, the Block D stage was ignited three times to raise the initial ~190 km × ~300 km × 51.6° orbit to a final 2577 km × 5082 km × 55.87° orbit. The Block D stage was fitted with cameras in the tanks to monitor the fuel and oxidizer behaviour in weightlessness and during acceleration.[1] Kosmos-382 also carried other experiments, including a prototype environmental control subsystem named "Rosa" for producing potable water from atmospheric condensate exhaled by cosmonauts onboard Soviet crewed spacecraft. This system was later used on the Salyut space stations in the 1970s and 1980s.[2]

The following maneuvers were performed:

See also

References

  1. Web site: Zond (L1E) . space.skyrocket.de.
  2. Web site: Публикации сотрудников АО "НИИхиммаш" . Life Support Regeneration Systems for Long Space Flights (Publications by employees of JSC NIIhimmash) . www.niichimmash.ru.

External links