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Soyuz 36

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Soyuz 36
COSPAR ID1980-041AEdit this at Wikidata
SATCATno.11811
Mission duration65 days, 20 hours, 54 minutes, 23 seconds
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft typeSoyuz 7K-T
ManufacturerNPO Energia
Launch mass6,800 kilograms (15,000 lb)
Crew
Crew size2
LaunchingValeri Kubasov
Bertalan Farkas
LandingViktor Gorbatko
Pham Tuân
CallsignОрион(Orion- "Orion")
Start of mission
Launch date26 May 1980, 18:20:39(1980-05-26UTC18:20:39Z)UTC
RocketSoyuz-U
Launch siteBaikonur31/6
End of mission
Landing date31 July 1980, 15:15:02(1980-07-31UTC15:15:03Z)UTC
Landing site140 kilometres (87 mi) SE ofDzhezkazgan
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Perigee altitude197.5 kilometres (122.7 mi)
Apogee altitude281.9 kilometres (175.2 mi)
Inclination51.62 degrees
Period89.0 minutes
Docking withSalyut 6
Docking portAft port[1]
Docking dateMay 27, 1980, 19:56 UTC[2]
Undocking dateJuly 04, 1980, 16:39 UTC[1]
Time docked37d 20h 43m
Redocking withSalyut 6
Redocking portFront port
Redocking dateJuly 04, 1980, 17:09 UTC[1]
Unredocking dateJuly 31, 1980, 11:55 UTC[2]
Time redocked26d 18h 46m
Soyuz programme
(Crewed missions)

Soyuz 36(Russian:Союз 36,Union 36) was a 1980Sovietcrewed space flight to theSalyut 6space station.It was the 11th mission to and ninth successful docking at the orbiting facility. The Soyuz 36 crew were the first to visit the long-durationSoyuz 35resident crew.[2]

Soyuz 36 carriedValery KubasovandBertalan Farkas,the firstHungariancosmonaut,into space. They swapped Soyuz craft with the long-duration crew and returned to Earth in Soyuz 35; a later crew used their craft to return to Earth.

Crew

[edit]
Position Launching crew Landing crew
Commander Soviet UnionValery Kubasov
Third and last spaceflight
Soviet UnionViktor Gorbatko
Third and last spaceflight
Research Cosmonaut HungaryBertalan Farkas
Only spaceflight
VietnamPham Tuân
Only spaceflight

Backup crew

[edit]
Position Crew
Commander Soviet UnionVladimir Dzhanibekov
Research Cosmonaut HungaryBéla Magyari

Mission parameters

[edit]
  • Mass:6,800 kg (15,000 lb)
  • Perigee:197.5 km (122.7 mi)
  • Apogee:281.9 km (175.2 mi)
  • Inclination:51.62°
  • Period:89.0 minutes

Mission highlights

[edit]

Soyuz 36 was launched on 26 May 1980 withValery KubasovandHungariancosmonautBertalan Farkas,headed to the Salyut 6 space station whereLeonid PopovandValery Ryumin,launched aboardSoyuz 35,were resident.[3]The flight was originally scheduled for 5 June 1979, but was cancelled due to theSoyuz 33failure.[4]They successfully docked at the aft port the day after launching.[4]The flight was the fifthIntercosmosflight whereby guest cosmonauts from Soviet allied nations would visit the space station, typically for about a week. The flight was only the second time a Soviet mission had a civilian commander.[3]

Upon boarding, the visiting crew carried out Hungarian experiments, so many that the visiting crew sometimes only got three hours of sleep.[4]One experiment was Pille, which measured radiation doses received by the crew with miniaturethermoluminescentdevices attached to their clothing and to the walls of the station. Another three experiments studied the formation ofinterferonin human cells under weightless conditions.[3]Earth resources work using the on-board cameras were carried out, in coordination with ground crews, airplanes and helicopters.[4]

Farkas was said by the Hungarian press to have adjusted far quicker than Kubasov to the weightless conditions.[3]

The Soyuz craft was used to boost the station's orbit on 29 May, then Kubasov and Farkas swapped Soyuz craft with the long-duration crew, exchanging seat liners, pressure suits and personal items, before departing the station in Soyuz 35 on 3 June and landed 140 km southeast ofDzhezkazgan.[4]The Soyuz 36 spacecraft was later used to return the crew ofSoyuz 37to earth.[3]

References

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  1. ^abcRelocations of Manned Spacecraft
  2. ^abcThe mission report is available here:http:// spacefacts.de/mission/english/soyuz-36.htm
  3. ^abcdeClark, Phillip (1988).The Soviet Manned Space Program.New York: Orion Books, a division of Crown Publishers, Inc. pp.119–120.ISBN0-517-56954-X.
  4. ^abcdeNewkirk, Dennis (1990).Almanac of Soviet Manned Space Flight.Houston, Texas: Gulf Publishing Company. pp. 211–212.ISBN0-87201-848-2.