A failed Soviet Venus probe is expected to fall to Earth today, but when and where? Here’s what we know

Dmitry Kuznetsov
4 Min Read
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In 1972, the Soviet Union launched the Kosmos 482 Lander, a spacecraft designed to reach Venus and Earth on its surface. However, the ship never reached Venus. The rocket that launched it suffered an anomaly, hitting the probe in an elliptical orbit around the earth, where it has remained for more than 50 years.

That five decades in space could come to an end today. Kosmos 482 is expected to return to the atmosphere of the Earth and the possible clash somewhere on the planet’s surface. The probe consists of a 3.3 -feet wide titanium shell (1 meter wide) lined with thermal insulation, designed to resist the heat of entry to the atmosphere of Venus. The ship weighs around 1,190 pounds (495 kilograms).

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