User:EarthPerson/List of Cosmos satellites

Cosmos satellies

 * Cosmos 21 - possible failed Venus flyby
 * Cosmos 27 - failed Venus flyby
 * Cosmos 47 - Voskhod programme template
 * Cosmos 60 - failed Lunar lander
 * Cosmos 96 - Venera programme template
 * Cosmos 110 - first Soviet biosatellite (contained biological experiments)
 * Cosmos 110 - Bion (satellite) - Voskhod programme template
 * Cosmos 111 - Luna programme template
 * Cosmos 112 - launch from then secret Plesetsk Cosmodrome (1966)
 * Cosmos 133 - Soviet Soyuz programme test satellite
 * Cosmos 140 - probable Soyuz programme precursor. It was the third attempted flight of the Soyuz 7K-OK model (1967)
 * Cosmos 167 - Venera programme template
 * Cosmos 186 and 188 - Soyuz predecessor, the first ever automatic docking of satellites
 * Cosmos 212 and Cosmos 213 - Soyuz programme test spacecraft
 * Cosmos 238 - final test series of Soyuz programme spacecraft
 * Cosmos 300 - Luna programme template
 * Cosmos 305 - Luna programme template
 * Cosmos 359 - Venera programme template
 * Cosmos 379 - test of the L3-Lunar Lander (1970)
 * Cosmos 419 - failed Mars mission
 * Cosmos 419 - Failed & Cancelled missions to the Planet Mars template
 * Cosmos 434 - final test of the L3 unmanned
 * Cosmos 482 - failed Venus mission, crashed in south New Zealand.
 * Cosmos 482 - Venera programme template - Ashburton balls
 * Cosmos 496 - Unmanned test of the redesigned Soyuz Ferry with solar arrays (1973)
 * Cosmos 557 - failed Salyut space station
 * Cosmos 573 - Unmanned test of the Soyuz Ferry without solar arrays (1973)
 * Cosmos 605 - first of the Bion series, containing biological organisms
 * Cosmos 605 - Bion 1, (1973) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 613 - Long-duration orbital storage test of the Soyuz Ferry in preparation for long stays attached to a space station (1973 - 1974)
 * Cosmos 638 - Unmanned test of the ASTP Soyuz. Carried APAS-75 androgynous docking system. (1974)
 * Cosmos 656 - unmanned Soyuz test
 * Cosmos 670 - unmanned Soyuz 7K-S test (1974)
 * Cosmos 672 - Second unmanned test of the ASTP Soyuz spacecraft. Also had APAS-75 androgynous docking system. (1974)
 * Cosmos 690 - Bion 2, (1974) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 772 - unmanned military Soyuz 7K-S test. Unsuccessful mission (1975)
 * Cosmos 782 - first mission in which the U.S. participated in the Soviet Cosmos program
 * Cosmos 782 - Bion 3, (1975) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 869 - unmanned military Soyuz 7K-S test. Somewhat Successful mission (1976?) - check this article - dates wrong.
 * http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmos_869 shows between Soyuz 23 & Soyuz 24.
 * Cosmos 936 - Bion 4, (1977) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 954 - failed and deorbited with a full nuclear payload, contaminating an area in northern Canada
 * Cosmos 954 - Soviet Radar Ocean Reconnaissance Satellite (RORSAT), Operation Morning Light
 * Cosmos 1001 - upgraded Soyuz T - mission failure (1978)
 * Cosmos 1074 - Unmanned Soyuz-T test (1979)
 * Cosmos 1129 - Bion 5, (1979) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 1374 - BOR-4 spacecraft - suborbital - splashed down into the Indian Ocean about 900 km to the west of Australia - (1982/06/04)
 * Cosmos 1402 - RORSAT - Failed to boost into storage orbit in late 1982. Reactor separated and landed in South Atlantic Ocean (1983/2/7)
 * Cosmos 1445 - BOR-4 spacecraft - orbital - splashed down into the Indian Ocean about 900 km to the west of Australia - (1983/03/16)
 * Cosmos 1514 - Bion 6, (1983) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 1517 - BOR-4 spacecraft - orbital - splashed down into the Black Sea to the west of the Crimea peninsula - (1983/12/27)
 * Cosmos 1616 - BOR-4 spacecraft - orbital - splashed down into the Black Sea to the west of the Crimea peninsula - (1984/12/19)
 * Cosmos 1667 - Bion 7, (1985) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 1669 - Progress supply craft to Salyut 7 (1985)
 * Cosmos 1887 - Bion 8, (1987) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 1900 - RORSAT - primary system failed to eject the reactor core into storage orbit, but the backup managed to push it into an orbit 80km (50 miles) below its intended altitude
 * Cosmos 2044 - Bion 9, (1989) - Bion satellites template
 * Cosmos 2229 - Bion 10, (1992) - Bion satellites template