# Cosmos 1565
**Wikidata**: [Q12753337](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q12753337)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/cosmos-1565

## Summary
Cosmos 1565 is a satellite launched on 28 May 1984 that is an instance of the Strela-1M satellite class. It was launched from Plesetsk Cosmodrome Site 132 on a Kosmos-3M launch vehicle (COSPAR ID 1984-052G).

## Key Facts
- Cosmos 1565 is an instance of the Strela-1M satellite class.  
- COSPAR ID: 1984-052G.  
- Launch date (point in time): 1984-05-28.  
- Launch time (significant event qualifier): 21:52:00 (on 1984-05-28).  
- Launch site: Plesetsk Cosmodrome Site 132.  
- Launch vehicle: Kosmos-3M (a Russian/Soviet launch vehicle).  
- SCN (spacecraft number): 15004.  
- Alias: Kosmos 1565.  
- Wolfram Language entity code: Entity["Satellite", "15004"].  
- Wikipedia language pages exist in Macedonian (mk), Serbo-Croatian/Sh (sh), and Serbian (sr); sitelink_count: 3.

## FAQs
### Q: What is Cosmos 1565?
A: Cosmos 1565 is a Strela-1M-class satellite that was launched on 28 May 1984. It is cataloged under COSPAR ID 1984-052G and SCN 15004.

### Q: When and where was Cosmos 1565 launched?
A: Cosmos 1565 was launched on 1984-05-28, with the recorded launch event at 21:52:00, from Plesetsk Cosmodrome Site 132.

### Q: Which rocket launched Cosmos 1565?
A: Cosmos 1565 was launched on a Kosmos-3M launch vehicle, a Russian/Soviet launch vehicle type.

## Why It Matters
Cosmos 1565 is part of the Strela-1M series of satellites and represents a specific deployment carried out on 28 May 1984 from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome using the Kosmos-3M vehicle. As a documented satellite with a COSPAR designation (1984-052G) and an SCN (15004), it forms a verifiable data point in records of Soviet-era/Russian space activity and satellite catalogues. The launch details (site, vehicle, exact launch time) illustrate continued use of Plesetsk Site 132 and the Kosmos-3M family for placing Strela-class satellites into orbit during that period. For researchers, cataloguers, and historians, Cosmos 1565 is relevant as an identifiable member of the Strela-1M inventory and as an entry with cross-references in data systems (for example, a Wolfram Language entity and Wikipedia entries in several languages), enabling linkage between launch records, satellite registries, and published listings.

## Notable For
- Being an identified instance of the Strela-1M satellite class.  
- COSPAR designation 1984-052G and spacecraft number (SCN) 15004.  
- Launch on 1984-05-28 at 21:52:00 from Plesetsk Cosmodrome Site 132.  
- Launch aboard the Kosmos-3M launch vehicle.  
- Presence in multiple reference systems (Wolfram entity code and Wikipedia pages in mk, sh, sr).

## Body

### Overview
- Name/alias: Cosmos 1565 (also listed as Kosmos 1565).  
- Class: Strela-1M (instance_of: Strela-1M).  
- Catalog identifiers: COSPAR ID 1984-052G; SCN 15004.  
- Wolfram Language entity: Entity["Satellite", "15004"].

### Identification and classification
- Instance of: Strela-1M (per structured record).  
- COSPAR ID: 1984-052G — the international designator assigned to this launch piece.  
- SCN: 15004 — the spacecraft number recorded in the supplied dataset.  
- Aliases: Kosmos 1565.

### Launch details
- Launch date: 1984-05-28.  
- Recorded launch event time: 21:52:00 on 1984-05-28.  
- Launch site: Plesetsk Cosmodrome Site 132.  
- Launch vehicle: Kosmos-3M (a Russian/Soviet launch vehicle class used for this mission).

### Operational and reference data
- The entity is recorded in reference systems with a Wolfram Language entity code of Entity["Satellite", "15004"].  
- Wikipedia pages exist in Macedonian (mk), Serbo-Croatian/Sh (sh), and Serbian (sr), reflecting available language coverage; sitelink_count: 3.

### Related classes and vehicles
- Satellite class: Strela-1M.  
- Launch vehicle class: Kosmos-3M (Russian/Soviet rocket family).

### Recorded significant event
- Event: rocket launch.  
- Location qualifier: Plesetsk Cosmodrome Site 132.  
- Time qualifier: 21:52:00.  
- Point in time: 1984-05-28.

### Notes
- All details in this entry are drawn from the provided structured source data (identifiers, launch metadata, class and vehicle associations, and language/sitelink counts).

## References

1. Jonathan's Space Report