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- Path: sparky!uunet!enterpoop.mit.edu!world!ksr!clj@ksr.com
- From: clj@ksr.com (Chris Jones)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: Soviet space disaster?
- Message-ID: <20595@ksr.com>
- Date: 2 Jan 93 14:37:16 EST
- References: <2JAN199307174468@amarna.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- Sender: news@ksr.com
- Reply-To: clj@ksr.com (Chris Jones)
- Followup-To: soc.history
- Organization: Kendall Square Research Corp
- Lines: 67
- In-reply-to: packer@amarna.gsfc.nasa.gov (Charles Packer)
-
- In article <2JAN199307174468@amarna.gsfc.nasa.gov>, packer@amarna (Charles Packer) writes:
- >Somebody told me recently that they had read that the
- >former Soviet Union had suffered a space disaster in which
- >they had to leave one of their cosmonauts in orbit to die
- >because they couldn't rescue him. My informant said that
- >his information came from reading newspaper accounts of
- >formerly secret material that was made public in the last
- >couple of years during the unravelling of the Soviet system
- >and the subsequent increase in openness of discussion and
- >publication in Russia.
- >
- >I don't recall seeing anything about this. I would expect
- >that it would have been given major coverage in the West
- >and would have come to my attention. Also, I can't recall
- >a story to this effect any time in the past thirty years,
- >though my memory might be hazy.
- >
- >Can anybody shed light on whether this event did happen?
-
- Like you, I don't recall anything about this in the last couple of years. I do
- recall that, early in the space era (early sixties), there were persistent
- reports of dubious reliability concerning Soviet space disasters which stranded
- crews of various sizes in orbit. As far as I know, the only Soviet in-flight
- spaceflight disasters are the two publicly announced ones: Soyuz 1, which
- killed its lone occupant, and Soyuz 11, which killed its crew of 3. In
- addition, there was a Soyuz mission which had difficulty during retrofire,
- which led to the cosmonauts reentering a day later than planned, a day which
- was spent in orbit without the Soyuz orbital module. This was jettisoned in
- preparation for retrofire, and took with it most of the living arrangements
- (including the toilet!).
-
- There have been three times the press has resorted to saying that cosmonauts
- were stranded in orbit when in fact they were not (in every case the cosmonauts
- made successful reentries). Once was when a Soyuz launch abort prevented a
- swap of the Soyuz ferries within the nominal on-orbit lifetime of the ferry.
- The cosmonauts later made a problem-free on-schedule reentry using the
- "expired" Soyuz. Another time some fabric insulation came loose from a Soyuz
- ferry, and the Soviets stated they were going to repair it before the scheduled
- reentry. However, they were perfectly willing to use the unrepaired spacecraft
- to reenter in an emergency, and they did repair it to their satisfaction before
- reentry. The third time is when one cosmonaut had his return flight pushed
- back twice due to changing crew assignments.
-
- Soyuz 1, which killed Vladimir Komarov, *might* be the flight which generated
- the report to which you refer. What is known is that Soyuz 1 was launched,
- there were no television pictures broadcast from the spacecraft in flight, it
- reentered outside a normal Soyuz reentry window, and its crew member did not
- survive. It has been reported that it was in trouble almost from the beginning
- of its flight, that at least one of its two solar panels was torn loose as it
- entered orbit (explaining the lack of TV pictures), that Komarov had constant
- trouble controlling the spacecraft, resulting in the cancellation of the planned
- launch of another Soyuz to dock with it for a crew exchange, that he cancelled
- two reentry attempts due to being unable to properly align the Soyuz for
- retrofire, and that the actual reentry was a desperate affair in which he set
- the spacecraft spinning for stabilization and that this spinning indirectly led
- to the reported cause of the reentry failure: the shroud lines of his main
- parachute tangled and the attempt to deploy the backup chute failed when it
- tangled with the main chute. Unlike the 3 Soyuz 11 cosmonauts, whose bodies
- lay in state for several days before interment in the Kremlin wall, Komarov's
- interment took place without his body having lain in state.
-
- Like the US, the Soviets also have suffered a number of training accidents,
- cosmonauts dying in plane crashes, and cosmonauts dying of natural causes.
- They have also had at least three pad accidents which have killed (in total)
- multiple hundreds of support personnel.
- --
- Chris Jones clj@ksr.com
-