Soyuz 5
Crewed flight of the Soyuz programme / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Soyuz 5 (Russian: Союз 5, Union 5) was a Soyuz mission using the Soyuz 7K-OK spacecraft launched by the Soviet Union on 15 January 1969, which docked with Soyuz 4 in orbit. It was the first docking of two crewed spacecraft of any nation, and the first transfer of crew from one space vehicle to another of any nation, the only time a transfer was accomplished with a space walk – two months before the United States Apollo 9 mission performed the first internal crew transfer.
Mission type | Test flight |
---|---|
Operator | Experimental Design Bureau (OKB-1) |
COSPAR ID | 1969-005A |
SATCAT no. | 03656 |
Mission duration | 3 days 54 minutes 15 seconds |
Orbits completed | 49 |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Soyuz 7K-OK No.13[1] |
Spacecraft type | Soyuz 7K-OK (passive) |
Manufacturer | Experimental Design Bureau (OKB-1) |
Launch mass | 6585 kg [2] |
Landing mass | 2800 kg |
Dimensions | 7.13 m long 2.72 m wide |
Crew | |
Crew size | 3 up 1 down |
Members | Boris Volynov |
Launching | Aleksei Yeliseyev Yevgeny Khrunov |
Callsign | Байкал (Baikal - "Lake Baikal") |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 15 January 1969, 07:04:57 GMT |
Rocket | Soyuz |
Launch site | Baikonur, Site 1/5[3] |
Contractor | Experimental Design Bureau (OKB-1) |
End of mission | |
Landing date | 18 January 1969, 07:59:12 GMT |
Landing site | Ural Mountains at 200 km of the southeast of Kostanay, near Orenburg, Kazakhstan |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric orbit[4] |
Regime | Low Earth orbit |
Perigee altitude | 210.0 km |
Apogee altitude | 233.0 km |
Inclination | 51.69° |
Period | 88.87 minutes |
Docking with Soyuz 4 | |
Docking date | 16 January 1969, 08:20 GMT |
Undocking date | 16 January 1969, 12:55 GMT |
Time docked | 4 hours 35 minutes |
Boris Volynov, Aleksei Yeliseyev and Yevgeny Khrunov |
The mission, flown by cosmonauts Boris Volynov, Aleksei Yeliseyev, and Yevgeny Khrunov, was also memorable for its dramatic re-entry. The craft's service module did not separate, so it entered the atmosphere nose-first, leaving Volynov hanging by his restraining straps. As the craft aerobraked, the atmosphere burned through the service module, allowing the remaining descent module to right itself before the escape hatch was burned through. During the descent, the parachute lines tangled and the landing rockets failed, resulting in a hard landing that broke Volynov's teeth.