Little is revealed about the satellites themselves, except that they are built by VNIIEM, consist of a service module and a payload module and will carry up to 8 kg of hydrazine and between 80 and 110 kg of xenon. This shows they will use both monopropellant hydrazine thrusters and an electric propulsion system. Both are likely provided by OKB Fakel, which is known to be involved in Razbeg (see the first post in the thread). As is known from procurement documentation, Razbeg will also have reaction wheels (DM-10-1000) for attitude control (see post 1).
Shouldn't it be the opposite, with 8 kg of xenon and between 80 and 110 kg of hydrazine? With a wet mass of 650 kg and normal assumptions (isp 220 s for hydrazine and 1500 s for xenon), such a spacecraft would have a delta-v of 466 m/s (283.4 for the chemical propulsion and 182.2 for the electric one), which seems reasonable. Not taking into account the huge price of such a quantity of xenon.
Quote from: Ludovic Monnerat on 06/01/2024 05:23 am<snip>Anyway, you've made an excellent point and this is another mystery to unravel.
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