A Molniya-M Rocket Body that was launched on the 23rd October 2007 from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome on the Kosmos 2430, is predicted to re-enter the Earths atmosphere on the 6th December 2007 @ 12:45 GMT ± 48 hours.
THe Molniya-M rocket lifted off from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern Russia at 12:39 am EDT (04:39 GMT) Tuesday and placed its payload into an elliptical orbit about an hour later. The satellite delivered into orbit, has been designated Kosmos-2430, and is a new 73D6 US-KS early-warning satellite that will orbit in an orbital plane opposite to one that is occupied by another US-KS satellite in a high-elliptical orbit - Kosmos-2422. According to NORAD, the initial orbit inclination of Kosmos-2430 is 62.8 degrees, orbital period is about 702 minutes; Apogee of about 39,200 km, and Perigee 560 km.
Russia has launched a Molniya-M carrier rocket with 2BL upper stage and a Kosmos military (Oko) satellite aboard from the Plesetsk space centre on Tuesday morning. The satellite entered orbit about one hour later.
The launching of the carrier with a military satellite was made from the northern cosmodrome at 08:39 MT. According to data, received by the public relations service at the command post of the Space Troops and at the main centre of tests and control over spacecraft named after Titov, the lift-off of the carrier passed smoothly. Land facilities controlled and control the launching and the flight of the carrier. The centre planned to start tracking the missile at 08:43. The calculated time of putting the spacecraft into a target orbit is at 09:35. Deputy commander of the Space Troops Alexander Lopatin exercised general guidance of the launching - Alexei Zolotukhin, Space Troops service chief.
Russia has now more than 60 military and dual-purpose satellites in orbit for communications and intelligence.