Soyuz 16 Explained

Soyuz 16
Mission Type:Test flight for ASTP mission
Operator:Soviet space program
Cospar Id:1974-096A
Satcat:07561
Mission Duration:5 days 22 hours 23 minutes 35 seconds
Orbits Completed:95
Spacecraft:Soyuz 7K-TM No.4
Spacecraft Type:Soyuz 7K-TM
Manufacturer:NPO Energia
Launch Mass:6680 kg
Landing Mass:1200 kg
Launch Date:2 December 1974, 09:40:00 UTC
Launch Rocket:Soyuz-U
Launch Site:Baikonur, Site 1/5[1]
Landing Date:8 December 1974, 08:03:35 UTC
Landing Site:30 km of the northeast of Arkalyk, Kazakhstan
Crew Size:2
Crew Members:Anatoly Filipchenko
Nikolai Rukavishnikov
Crew Callsign:Russian: Буран (Russian: Buran - "Blizzard")
Orbit Reference:Geocentric orbit
Orbit Regime:Low Earth orbit
Orbit Periapsis:177.0 km
Orbit Apoapsis:223.0 km
Orbit Inclination:51.7°
Orbit Period:88.4 minutes
Apsis:gee
Insignia:Salyut program insignia.svg
Insignia Caption:Salyut program insignia
Insignia Size:175px
Programme:Soyuz programme
Previous Mission:Soyuz 15
Next Mission:Soyuz 17

Soyuz 16 (Russian: Союз 16, Union 16) was a December, 1974, crewed test flight for a joint Soviet-United States space flight which culminated in the Apollo–Soyuz mission in July 1975. The two-man Soviet crew, Anatoly Filipchenko and Nikolai Rukavishnikov, tested a docking ring and other systems to be used in the joint flight.

Crew

Reserve crew

Mission parameters

Background

The Soyuz 16 mission was the final rehearsal and first crewed mission in a program which culminated in the Apollo–Soyuz (ASTP) mission seven months later.[4] The Soviet Union and the United States, Cold War rivals, had signed several arms control treaties in the 1960s and 1970s, and had entered into a period of detente by the early 1970s. In 1972, a treaty was signed to participate in a joint crewed space flight as a symbol of this detente.[5]

Early concepts for a joint flight included the docking of a Soyuz craft to the American Skylab space station, or an Apollo vehicle docking with a Salyut space station. Once the Americans abandoned their Skylab station in 1974, the Apollo-Salyut concept seemed to be the logical choice, but since the Soviets had started to develop a universal docking adapter for the mission and feared having to publicly reveal details of their military-focused Salyut missions, the two powers opted to link a Soyuz spacecraft with an Apollo spacecraft.[5]

Three test flights of an uncrewed version of the ASTP spacecraft were flown: Kosmos 638, launched 3 April 1974; Kosmos 652, launched 15 May 1974; and Kosmos 672, launched 12 August 1974. These three flights, and Soyuz 16, were all launched with an improved version of a Soyuz booster.[5]

Mission highlights

In an unprecedented move, Soviet planners offered to inform their NASA counterparts of the time of the launch, as long as they did not reveal that time to the press. NASA officials refused to agree to that condition and, accordingly, were informed of the launch an hour after it occurred, on 2 December 1974.[4]

During the flight, Cosmonauts Anatoly Filipchenko and Nikolai Rukavishnikov tested the androgynous docking system to be used for the ASTP mission by retracting and extending a simulated 20 kg American docking ring.[4] [5] The crew also tested modified environmental systems, new solar panels and improved control systems, as well as a new radar docking system. Air pressure was reduced from 760 mm to 540 mm and oxygen raised from 20% to 40% to test reducing the planned transfer time to Apollo from two to one hour.[5] On 7 December 1974, the docking ring was jettisoned with explosive bolts to test emergency measures if the capture latches got stuck during the ASTP flight.

The craft landed 8 December 1974, near Arkalyk and was hailed a complete success.[5] The mission duration, six days, matched the ASTP mission duration to within 10 minutes.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baikonur LC1. 2009-03-04 . Encyclopedia Astronautica. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20090415160730/http://www.astronautix.com/sites/baiurlc1.htm. 2009-04-15.
  2. Web site: Display: Soyuz 16 1974-096A. NASA. 14 May 2020. 11 October 2020.
  3. Web site: Trajectory: Soyuz 16 1974-096A. NASA . 14 May 2020. 11 October 2020.
  4. Book: Clark, Phillip . The Soviet Manned Space Program. registration. 1988. 0-517-56954-X. Orion Books, a division of Crown Publishers, Inc.. New York.
  5. Book: Newkirk, Dennis. Almanac of Soviet Manned Space Flight. 1990. 0-87201-848-2. Gulf Publishing Company. Houston, Texas.