Kosmos 419 Explained

Kosmos 419
Mission Type:Mars orbiter
Operator:Soviet space program
Cospar Id:1971-042A
Satcat:5221
Spacecraft Type:3MS No. 170
Manufacturer:NPO Lavochkin
Launch Mass:4650kg (10,250lb)
Launch Date: UTC
Launch Rocket:Proton-K/D
Launch Site:Baikonur 81/23
Launch Contractor:Khrunichev
Disposal Type:Launch failure
Orbit Reference:Geocentric[1]
Orbit Regime:Low Earth
Orbit Periapsis:134 km
Orbit Apoapsis:187 km
Orbit Inclination:51.5°
Orbit Period:87.7 min
Apsis:gee
Programme:Mars program
Previous Mission:Mars 1969B
Next Mission:Mars 2
Programme2:Kosmos (satellites)
Previous Mission2:Kosmos 418
Next Mission2:Kosmos 420

Kosmos 419 (Russian: Космос 419 meaning Cosmos 419), also known as 3MS No.170 was a failed Soviet spacecraft intended to visit Mars. The spacecraft was launched on 10 May 1971, however, due to an upper stage malfunction, it failed to depart low Earth orbit.

Background

In 1971, Mars was at its closest to Earth since 1956, and in May of that year, both the Soviet Union and the United States made new attempts to reach the Red Planet. Kosmos 419 was intended to overtake the United States probes, Mariner 8 and Mariner 9, with the aim of becoming the first Mars orbiter. As it was, Mariner 8 was lost in a launch failure two days before Kosmos 419 was launched, and Mariner 9 went on to become the first spacecraft to orbit Mars.

Launch

Kosmos 419 was one of three Mars spacecraft launched by the Soviet Union in 1971, the others being Mars 2 and Mars 3; launched days after Kosmos 419. Unlike the 4M spacecraft, Mars 2 and 3, Kosmos 419 was a 3MS spacecraft which consisted only of an orbiter, with no lander.[2] [3] It was the ninth Soviet spacecraft launched to Mars.

Orbit

A Proton-K carrier rocket successfully put the spacecraft and a Blok D upper stage into a low earth parking orbit with an apogee of and a perigee of and an inclination of 51.4 degrees. The Blok D's ignition timer was incorrectly set, resulting in it failing to ignite; the timer had been set so that the stage would ignite 1.5 years after launch rather than the intended 1.5 hours. Due to its low orbit, which quickly decayed, Kosmos 419 reentered the Earth's atmosphere on 12 May 1971, two days after launch.

The designation Kosmos 419 was a generic name given to Soviet spacecraft operating in Earth orbit; at the time, Soviet planetary spacecraft which failed to depart Earth orbit would be given designations in the Kosmos series to disguise the failure.[4] Had it departed Earth orbit, Kosmos 419 would have become Mars 2, a designation which was used instead for the next mission, 4M No.171.

Scientific Instruments[5]

  1. Fluxgate Magnetometer
  2. Infrared Radiometer
  3. Infrared Photometer
  4. Spectrometer
  5. Photometer
  6. Radiometer
  7. Ultraviolet Photometer
  8. Cosmic-ray detector
  9. Charged particle spectrometer
  10. Imaging System
  11. Stereo antenna

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mars M-71. Mark Wade. Encyclopedia Astronautica. 26 May 2024.
  2. Web site: Космические аппараты серии Марс-71 НПО им. С.А.Лавочкина . Laspace.ru . 17 February 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130510052029/http://www.laspace.ru/rus/mars23.php . 10 May 2013 . dead .
  3. Web site: Chronology of Mars Missions. ResearchGate. en . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20181210015825/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/328715311_Chronology_of_Mars_Missions. 10 December 2018.
  4. Web site: NASA—NSSDC—Spacecraft—Details . Nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov . 17 February 2014.
  5. Web site: In Depth Kosmos 419. Solar System Exploration: NASA Science. 26 December 2018.