Manufacturer | OKB-1 |
---|---|
Country of origin | Soviet Union |
Applications | Communications satellite |
Production | |
Status | Active |
Launched | 7 |
Maiden launch | 4 June 1964 (fail) 23 April 165 (success) |
Last launch | 20 October 1966 |
Molniya 1 (Russian: Молния-1) is the first Soviet communications satellite. A total of 5 experimental devices were launched to create a long-distance radio communication line between Moscow and Vladivostok. Later, a series of Soviet and later Russian communications satellites were developed on the basis of the Molniya-1 spacecraft: Molniya-1+ (1967), Molniya-2 (1971), Molniya-3 (1974), Molniya-1T (1983), Molniya-3K (2001). These devices solved the problem of providing long-distance telephone and telegraph communications to remote areas of the Russian Far North, Siberia and the Russian Far East and retransmitting Soviet Central Television channels. For the first time, a digital communication system was used as a means of communication with the satellite.[1] Since 2006, the Molniya satellites have been replaced by more advanced Meridian devices.