Venera 4
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Venera 4
Summary
Venera 4 is a space probe[1]. It draws 160 Wikipedia views per month (space_probe category, ranking #48 of 135).[2]
Key Facts
- Venera 4's image is recorded as Venera-4 capsule in museum.JPG[3].
- Venera 4's instance of is recorded as space probe[4].
- Venera 4's operator is recorded as NPO Lavochkin[5].
- Venera 4's follows is recorded as Venera 3[6].
- Venera 4's followed by is recorded as Venera 5[7].
- Venera 4's manufacturer is recorded as NPO Lavochkin[8].
- Venera 4's COSPAR ID is recorded as 1967-058A[9].
- Venera 4's part of is recorded as Venera[10].
- Venera 4's Commons category is recorded as Venera 4[11].
- Venera 4's space launch vehicle is recorded as Molniya-M[12].
- Venera 4's SCN is recorded as 02840[13].
- Venera 4's type of orbit is recorded as heliocentric orbit[14].
- Venera 4's UTC date of spacecraft launch is recorded as +1967-06-12T00:00:00Z[15].
- Venera 4's UTC date of spacecraft landing is recorded as +1967-10-18T00:00:00Z[16].
- Venera 4's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04swhd[17].
- Venera 4's cause of destruction is recorded as hard landing[18].
- Venera 4's significant event is recorded as rocket launch[19].
- Venera 4's significant event is recorded as loss of signal[20].
- Venera 4's significant event is recorded as hard landing[21].
- Venera 4's launch contractor is recorded as Progress State Research and Production Rocket Space Center[22].
- Venera 4's location of landing is recorded as Venus[23].
- Venera 4's described by source is recorded as Retro Space HD[24].
- Venera 4's start point is recorded as Gagarin's Start[25].
- Venera 4's start point is recorded as Baikonur Cosmodrome[26].
- Venera 4's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'ru', 'text': 'Венера-4'}[27].
Why It Matters
Venera 4 draws 160 Wikipedia views per month (space_probe category, ranking #48 of 135).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]