Official name METEOR 1-3
Alternative name Meteor 1-3
Cospar ID 1970-019A
Norad ID 4349
Launch date 1970-03-17
Launch site PKMTR
Launch vehicle Vostok-2M
Country/Organization USSR
Type application Meteorology
RCS size LARGE
Decay date 1983-11-18
Shape Cyl + 2 Pan
Mass (kg) 1280
Diameter (m) 1.4
Height (m) 4.5
Span (m^2) 4.5
Contractors VNIIEM
Equipment TV, IR, AC
Power 2 deployable solar arrays, batteries

The Meteor-1 series was the first series of Soviet meteorological satellites.

These satellites were developed by VNIIEM. They consisted of a 3-axis stabilized pressurized body powered by two articulated solar panels.

The payload consisted of following instruments:

  • TV (TV optical instrument, MR-600A), a vidicon based visible light imaging instrument. It operated in the spectral range of 0.4 - 0.8 µm. It had an ground resolution of 1.25 - 3 km with an swath width of 1000 km.
  • IR (TV Infrared instrument, Lastocha), an infra-red imaging instrument operating in the spectral range of 8 - 12 µm. It had an ground resolution of 15 km with an swath width of 1000 km.
  • AC (Radiation Budget Sensor), an narrow-sector device which to measures the sun's radiation fluxes, the thermal radiation of the Earth's surface, cloud cover and the atmosphere. The instrument operated in the spectral range: 0.3 - 3 30 µm. AC had an ground resolution of 40 km × 50 km with an swath width of 2500 km.

Four satellites were used to test plasma thrusters in space. Meteor-1 10, 19 and 25 carried SPD-60 thrusters and Meteor-1 27 carried SPD-50 thrusters.

These satellites were orbited by Vostok-2M launched both from the Baikonur and Plesetsk cosmodromes. Due to the lack of performance of the launch vehicle, they were put into non-sun-synchronous polar orbits with a average altitude of 650 km for the first nine satellites and 900 km for the later satellites. Orbital inclination was 81-82º.

There were 11 satellites launched under the Kosmos designation and 25 more under the Meteor-1 name. Six more satellites - Meteor-1 18, 25, 28, 29, 30 and 31 - were in fact part of the Meteor-Priroda series. The Meteor-1 series was replaced by the more sophisticated Meteor-2 series.

Satellite COSPAR Date LS Launch Vehicle Remarks
COSMOS 44 1964-053A 1964-08-28 TTMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 58 1965-014A 1965-02-26 TTMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 100 1965-106A 1965-12-17 TTMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 118 1966-038A 1966-05-11 TTMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 122 1966-057A 1966-06-25 TTMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 144 1967-018A 1967-02-28 PKMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 156 1967-039A 1967-04-27 PKMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 184 1967-102A 1967-10-24 PKMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 206 1968-019A 1968-03-14 PKMTR Vostok-2M
COSMOS 226 1968-049A 1968-06-12 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-1 1969-029A 1969-03-26 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-2 1969-084A 1969-10-06 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-3 1970-019A 1970-03-17 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-4 1970-037A 1970-04-28 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-5 1970-047A 1970-06-23 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-6 1970-085A 1970-10-15 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-7 1971-003A 1971-01-20 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-8 1971-031A 1971-04-17 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-9 1971-059A 1971-07-16 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-10 1971-120A 1971-12-29 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-11 1972-022A 1972-03-30 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-12 1972-049A 1972-06-30 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-13 1972-085A 1972-10-26 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-14 1973-015A 1973-03-20 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-15 1973-034A 1973-05-29 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-16 1974-011A 1974-03-05 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-17 1974-025A 1974-04-24 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-19 1974-083A 1974-10-28 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-20 1974-099A 1974-12-17 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-21 1975-023A 1975-04-01 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-22 1975-087A 1975-09-18 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-23 1975-124A 1975-12-25 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-24 1976-032A 1976-04-07 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-26 1976-102A 1976-10-15 PKMTR Vostok-2M
METEOR 1-27 1977-024A 1977-04-05 PKMTR Vostok-2M