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In an astonishing twist, theKosmos 482, a Russian spacecraft launched in 1972, is thought to have finally fallen to Earth ...
Soviet-era spacecraft Kosmos 482 re-enters Earth's atmosphere after 53 years in orbit without causing injuries or damage, ...
A potentially destructive Soviet Venus lander that was lost in space for over half a century has reentered the Earth's ...
Launched in 1972 towards the fag end of the Space Race, the Kosmos 482 was meant to collect data from Venus. However, it remained stranded in the Earth’s orbit for over five decades.
The Kosmos 482 craft was built to survive the crushing, hostile atmosphere of Venus, so when it re-enters the atmosphere it is likely the craft could survive to hit Earth’s surface at up to 150mph ...
It doesn't reason. It doesn't understand. It just predicts what comes next. That’s what makes large language models powerful ...
This sort of failure would repeat itself during the failed Phobos-Grunt mission, which crashed back to Earth on January 15 th ...
The remaining payload in orbit weighs in at 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds), for context, the Upper Atmosphere ... Be sure to ...
Kosmos 482—originally launched on March 31, 1972, as part of the Soviet Union's ambitious Venera program to explore Venus—is expected to make a crash landing on Earth around May 9–10 ...
The Soviet Union's failed Kosmos 482 Venus spacecraft is set to make a somewhat delayed reappearance as it slams into the Earth in the next few weeks. As well as this, the series of probes ...
Kosmos 482 became stranded in Earth’s orbit after a premature engine cutoff during its launch phase. Now the spacecraft is expected to reenter Earth’s atmosphere between May 8 and 11 - after 53 years ...
Kosmos 482 took off in 1972, but a failed launch left the spaceship circling lifelessly above us – until now. Marco Langbroek, a satellite tracker based in the Netherlands, has predicted that ...