Kosmos 482, a spacecraft designed to land on Venus and marooned in Earth orbit since being launched by the U.S.S.R. in 1972, has made an uncontrolled re-entry.
The remains of a Soviet spacecraft launched in 1972 made an uncontrolled descent into the Indian Ocean on May 10, 2025. There are no reports of anyone being harmed. Known asand originally designed to parachute down to the surface of Venus, the armored capsule had spent 53 years marooned in an elliptical orbit before its fiery re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere.
, the stranded spacecraft's long journey ended harmlessly in the Indian Ocean, west of Jakarta in Indonesia, at 2:24 a.m. EDT on May 10, 2025.The European Space Agency had predicted that Kosmos 482 would re-enter anywhere between 52 degrees north and south of the equator at 1:37 a.m. EDT on May 10, 2025, with an uncertainty of plus or minus 3.28 hours. Kosmos 482 was part of the USSR’s Venera 8 mission to send two near-identical spacecraft to land on Venus and send back data on the planet’s surface temperature and pressure, according toThe first Venera 8 spacecraft launched on March 27, 1972, on a Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. It landed on Venus on April 6, 1972. It was one of thirteen probes sent to Venus by the USSR between 1961 and 1984. The second part of the Venera 8 mission launched four days later but failed to leave Earth's orbit after its Soyuz rocket suffered a malfunction. After being stranded in orbit, it was renamed Kosmos, as was the case with all Soviet missions that failed to leave orbit. Since it was built to withstand extreme temperatures on Venus, it survived re-entry into Earth's atmosphere.There have been about 6,910 rocket launches since the start of the space age in 1957, launching 21,620 satellites, about two-thirds of which are still in orbit, according to the. That's about 14,000 tonnes of space objects in Earth orbit. There are over 35,000 objects large enough to be tracked and cataloged by space surveillance networks currently orbiting Earth, according to theThere were 263 rocket launches in 2024, more than ever before for the fourth consecutive year. That’s one every 34 hours, on average, according to
Cosmos 482 Venera USSR Soviet U.S.S.R.
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