After reaching
low Earth orbit, but before separation of the spacecraft from the rocket, communication with the vessel was lost. Ground controllers only received brief telemetry shortly after that confirmed spacecraft separation as well as the deployment of the solar panels, but were not able to confirm the deployment of rendezvous antennas of the
KURS system. Initially controllers tried to fall back to the plan of making a two-day rendezvous with the ISS, but this was also abandoned after ground stations were not able to communicate with the spacecraft during the next three orbits. Two more communication sessions were attempted on 28 April to regain control of the spacecraft, but did not succeed. On 29 April, Roscosmos officially announced that the spacecraft was out of control and its orbit would eventually decay to fall back into
Earth's atmosphere, with multiple systems suffering from failure and the main engine's fuel lines depressurized. The spacecraft was expected to disintegrate in the Earth's atmosphere between 7 and 11 May 2015. On the same day, the United States'
NORAD reported that 44 pieces of
debris "in the vicinity of the resupply vehicle and its upper stage rocket body" were being tracked by space tracking systems. A representative of the
United States Air Force claimed that debris in the area indicated a blast. Given [the altitude of the debris] and the fact that Progress was found 30 to 40 kilometres above its intended orbit, we can say with confidence that there was some kind of blast at the moment of separation from the third stage of the rocket". On 8 May 2015 at 02:20 UTC, the spacecraft underwent
destructive atmospheric reentry between 350 and 1300 km off the
South American coast,
west of Chile. == Investigation==