At the beginning of the 1980s, one of the
USSR leading developers of scientific space probes had completed a preliminary design of revolutionary, new-generation spacecraft, 1F and 2F. The main purpose of Spektr was to develop a common platform that could be used for future deep-space missions.
NPO Lavochkin hoped to use the designs of the 1F as the standard design for
space telescopes. In 1982,
NPO Lavochkin had completed technical blueprints for RadioAstron, a space-based
radio telescope. The expectation was that the 1F and 2F spacecraft would follow the expectations of the RadioAstron mission (also known as Astron-2). Early on, many criticized the 1F platform for its questionable
astrophysics missions, even when compared to the older 4V
spacecraft bus. Although the
attitude control system of the 1F seemed to have little issues navigating planetary probes, its accuracy was much below the standard requirements for a high-precision
telescope. To add to 1F's technical issues, the
spacecraft seemed to lack electrically driven fly-wheels, which critics believed would have increased its stabilization in space. The
spacecraft also failed to have a moveable solar panel system, which could track the position of the
Sun without requiring the entire
satellite to reposition, eventually disrupting the observations process. It was one of three competing Spectrum missions, the others being Spektr X-Gamma and
Spektr-UV On 1 August 1983, VPK, the
Soviet Military Industrial Commission commissioned an official decision (number 274) titled, "On works for creation of automated interplanetary vehicles for the exploration of planets of the
Solar System, the
Moon and
cosmic space". This document outlined a new impetus for the development of
satellites. The new technical proposals submitted in mid-1984 included a
gamma-ray telescope designated to register
radio waves in the millimetre range. Both of these satellites incorporated rotating
solar panels, a highly sensitive star-tracking operating system and fly wheels. By the end of the 1980s, NPO Lavochkin Designer General, Vyacheslav Kovtunenko (
ru), proposed to design all future astrophysics satellites on the current
Oko-1 spacecraft model, designed originally to track incoming ballistic missiles. According to this plan, Oko-1 (a missile-watching
infrared telescope) would eventually be replaced with scientific instruments where the
satellite would be pointed towards
space rather than
Earth. == Observing techniques ==