May 19, 2022 8:03 am

Kosmos 2556 (Bars-M No. 3)

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Soyuz 2.1a

Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russian Federation
Days
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May 19, 2022 8:03 am

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Last Updated:

2026-07-11 16:04:50

Bars-M is the second incarnation of the Bars project, which was started in the mid 1990ies to develop a successor for the Komtea class of area surveillance satellites. The original Bars project was halted in the early 2000s. In 2007, TsSKB-Progress was contracted for Bars-M, for which reportedly the Yantar-based service module was replaced by a new developed advanced service module. The Bars-M satellites feature an electro-optical camera system called Karat, which is developed and built by the Leningrad Optical Mechanical Association (LOMO), and a dual laser altimeter instrument to deliver topographic imagery, stereo images, altimeter data and high-resolution images with a ground resolution around 1 meter.
Launch Overview
Window Open 07:30 UTC
Window Close 10:00 UTC
Lift Off May 19, 2022 · 08:03 UTC
Launch Facility Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russian Federation
Launch Pad 43/4 (43R)
Target Orbit Sun-Synchronous Orbit
Payload Overview
Customer Russian Space Forces
Payload Kosmos 2556 (Bars-M No. 3)
Rocket Soyuz 2.1a
Destination Sun-Synchronous Orbit
Recovery Overview
Landing Location See Mission Notes
Landing Type RTLS / Droneship
Bars-M is the second incarnation of the Bars project, which was started in the mid 1990ies to develop a successor for the Komtea class of area surveillance satellites. The original Bars project was halted in the early 2000s. In 2007, TsSKB-Progress was contracted for Bars-M, for which reportedly the Yantar-based service module was replaced by a new developed advanced service module. The Bars-M satellites feature an electro-optical camera system called Karat, which is developed and built by the Leningrad Optical Mechanical Association (LOMO), and a dual laser altimeter instrument to deliver topographic imagery, stereo images, altimeter data and high-resolution images with a ground resolution around 1 meter.

Height

LEO Payload

Total Launches

Status

Russian Space Forces
43/4 (43R)
Launch Overview
Window Open 07:30 UTC
Window Close 10:00 UTC
Lift Off May 19, 2022 · 08:03 UTC
Launch Facility Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russian Federation
Launch Pad 43/4 (43R)
Target Orbit Sun-Synchronous Orbit
Payload Overview
Customer Russian Space Forces
Payload Kosmos 2556 (Bars-M No. 3)
Rocket Soyuz 2.1a
Destination Sun-Synchronous Orbit
Recovery Overview
Landing Location See Mission Notes
Landing Type RTLS / Droneship

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