# Cosmos 182
**Wikidata**: [Q12753467](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q12753467)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/cosmos-182

## Summary
Cosmos 182 (also Kosmos 182) is a Zenit-4 class Soviet reconnaissance satellite that was launched on 16 October 1967. It was placed into space from Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 31 aboard a Voskhod launch vehicle.

## Key Facts
- Cosmos 182 is an instance of the Zenit-4 class of Soviet reconnaissance satellites.  
- COSPAR ID: 1967-098A.  
- SCN (catalog identifier): 02995.  
- Launch date: 1967-10-16.  
- Launch site: Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 31.  
- Launch vehicle: Voskhod.  
- Significant event: rocket launch from Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 31 at 08:00:00 on 1967-10-16.  
- Alias: Kosmos 182.  
- Wolfram Language entity code: Entity["Satellite", "02995"].  
- Wikipedia language coverage (sitelink_count = 4): hu, mk, sh, sr.

## FAQs
### Q: What is Cosmos 182?
A: Cosmos 182 is a Soviet-era Zenit-4 class reconnaissance satellite, cataloged under SCN 02995 and COSPAR ID 1967-098A.

### Q: When and where was Cosmos 182 launched?
A: Cosmos 182 was launched on 16 October 1967 from Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 31. The recorded launch time for the rocket event is 08:00:00 on that date.

### Q: Which rocket placed Cosmos 182 into orbit?
A: The satellite was launched using a Voskhod launch vehicle.

## Why It Matters
Cosmos 182 is part of the Zenit-4 series, which represents a class of Soviet reconnaissance satellites deployed during the 1960s. As a documented launch from Baikonur Site 31 on 16 October 1967, it contributes to the historical record of Soviet space activity and the development of reconnaissance capabilities during that era. Its catalog identifiers — COSPAR 1967-098A and SCN 02995 — make it a traceable object in international satellite registries and databases (including a Wolfram Language entity entry). The use of a Voskhod launch vehicle ties the mission to a specific Soviet launch system. Coverage in multiple language Wikipedias (hu, mk, sh, sr) indicates continued reference and interest across sources and languages. For researchers, historians, and satellite catalogers, Cosmos 182 is a verifiable data point in studying Cold War-era space operations and the deployment of photographic or reconnaissance platforms operated by the Soviet Union.

## Notable For
- Being a Zenit-4 class reconnaissance satellite of the Soviet program.  
- Launch on 16 October 1967 from Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 31.  
- Launch by a Voskhod-class launch vehicle.  
- Registered identifiers: COSPAR 1967-098A and SCN 02995.  
- Listed as Entity["Satellite","02995"] in the Wolfram Language.

## Body
### Overview
- Name: Cosmos 182 (alias: Kosmos 182).  
- Class: Zenit-4 (Soviet reconnaissance satellites).  
- Primary recorded event: rocket launch.

### Classification
- Instance of: Zenit-4 (class of Soviet reconnaissance satellites).  
- Role: reconnaissance (as implied by Zenit-4 class designation).

### Launch details
- Launch date: 1967-10-16.  
- Launch time (recorded qualifier): 08:00:00 on 1967-10-16.  
- Launch site: Baikonur Cosmodrome Site 31.  
- Launch vehicle: Voskhod.

### Identifiers and cataloging
- COSPAR ID: 1967-098A.  
- SCN: 02995.  
- Wolfram Language entity code: Entity["Satellite", "02995"].  
- Sitelink_count: 4 (Wikipedia language entries: hu, mk, sh, sr).

### Related entities
- Zenit-4 class — identified as the satellite class to which Cosmos 182 belongs.  
- Voskhod — used here as the launch vehicle for the mission; Voskhod is also a series name used for Soviet crewed spacecraft (related usages noted).

## References

1. Jonathan's Space Report