The Serhiy Pavlovych Korolyov Museum of Cosmonautics (Ukrainian: Музей космонавтики імені Сергія Павловича Корольова) is a technology museum in Zhytomyr, Ukraine dedicated to Serhiy Korolyov. Korolyov led the Sputnik project and was Chief engineer for the Soviet Union's rocket and space program from the late 1950s until his death in 1966. He was born in Zhytomyr, then part of the Russian Empire.
Музей космонавтики імені Сергія Павловича Корольова | |
Former name | Zhytomyr Serhiy Pavlovych Korolyov Museum of Cosmonauts[1] |
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Established | 1987[2] |
Location | Zhytomyr, Ukraine |
Coordinates | 50°15′13″N 28°40′40″E / 50.253627°N 28.677896°E |
Type | Technology museum |
Director | Iryna Dmytrivna Dyachuk[1] |
Website | www |
In 1970, the house in which Korolyov was born was dedicated as a memorial to him, a campus of the Zhytomyr Regional Museum.[1] The museum achieved independent status in 1987, and the present museum building was constructed in 1991.[2]
The museum houses around 11,000 exhibits related to rocket and space exploration, including the Soyuz 27 descent module, a small sample of lunar soil, full-size replicas of a complete Soyuz spacecraft, the Vostok 1 descent module, and the Lunokhod 2 lunar rover.[2] From 2013, 2.5 million visitors have passed through the museum's doors.[2]
Next to the exposition space, a rocket launches a geodetic version of the missile R-5 (8A62) (the rocket P5 was the first to carry a nuclear charge, and the last one to upgrade the A4 (Fau-2 missile) and the R-12 missile (8K63) (the first one was developed in the Dniepr ) with an engine on high-speed components
There are exposition of an animal in space
Suspicious in space
There are models of devices:
Learning the Moon
editAutomatic stations
editThe Luna-1 model (E-1 No. 4) is the first apparatus that passed the Moon at a distance of 6000 km
A copy of the pennant that delivered the Moon 2 device (E-1 No. 6) to the Moon
Model Luna-3E-2A No. 1 of the first apparatus, which photographed the reverse side of the Moon
Luna-9 (Е-6 №13) the layout of the first apparatus, which makes a soft landing on the Moon.
The Soviet automatic stations brought about 300 grams of the moon's soil, in the exposition there are samples of the moon's soil
Moonlight Program (E8)
editLunokhod-2 layout
editLow-directional decimetre antenna
reflector Lunokhoda-2
Gear of the Moonlight
Program N1-L3Н1-Л3
editMonthly module E
editThere are mock-ups of the lunar module E from this program, which was developed in the Dnipro in Yuzhnoe
edit-
Спускаємий модуль Блок -Е
Rocket N1
editThe layouts of the rocket N1u are comparable to Saturn V
The tape recorder Malysh-B
editThere is a wire tape recorder Malysh-B (main designer Babich A.I.) with automatic start from the thing, and the possibility of blocking control. It was developed for the monthly program – a spacesuit krechet-94. Such a tape recorder and its modifications Malysh-BM was used later in the flights of astronaut Beregovoi.
cassette for tape recorder
Flight scheme of Kondratyuk
Study of Venus
editVenus-7
The layout of the Venera-7 apparatus, which was the first working spacecraft to land on another planet on December 15, 1970.
Vega
editThere is an exhibition of the descent device of the Vega program (Veener and Galileo), which in 1985 made a soft landing on Venus and transmitted the signal for 56 minutes. Another part of this program was the study of the comet of Galileo, at a speed of folding 70 km per second.
Study of Mars
editTrajectory of flight to Phobos in 1988. Phobos program
Trajectory of flight to Mars
The Vostok program
editThis section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (May 2019) |
The first human flight into space
editThis section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (May 2019) |
Layout of descent device Vostok-1 (first with a man aboard)
editView of the porthole with a level of laziness
Space program
editEngine of the first stage RD-214 (rocket R12 and Space Missile)
Engine of the second stage RD-119 (Space-2) Layout 1:10
Program Soyuz
editThis section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (May 2019) |
Descent Soyuz-27 (real)
editCouch from Soyuz-27 descend module
editLayout of the ship Soyuz-27
editThe Soyuz-27 launch key
editDictaphone individual Soyuz-7 cosmonaut Dzhanibekova
editCommunication systems Zarya
editThis section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (May 2019) |
One of Zarya's connection modifications.
editRecorder Zvezda-64
editThe first space recording device that could suppress the noise of a spacecraft
editRecorder Pigmiy
edit(Soyuz-Apollo program)
editRecorder Planer-68
editDesigner Dunaev
editFor work on the "Strela-1m" satellite. Recording 12 telegraph messages (length 10.5-12.5 s)
editRecorder Tyulpan-M
editAstronauts's food
edit-
Borsch
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Borodinsky bread
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Pork with lecho
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Emergency stock of a cosmonaut
Automatic control unit P-12
editThere is a rocket control unit R-12. It was one of the most massive missiles in the territory of the Soviet Union, and the appearance of these missiles in Cuba caused the Caribbean crisis. It was the first rocket that was developed in the Dnieper.
It was the first rocket that had automatic control.
International Space Studies Program
editThere is a layout of the Interkosmos-1 Intercosmos device
Spectrograph for photographing the sun
Oreol 3 (Aureus 3, AUOS-Z-M-A-IK, ARCAD 3), the Oreol-3 1981 (designed to study the nature of the polar light)
systems with power of signals that differ by 10-12 orders. The difficult task of isolating obstacles was solved
12 experiments (4 from the Soviet Union, 7 from France, 1 compatible)
Marine launch
editLayout of missiles Zenit-2 and Zenith-3SL Scale 1: 100
Leonid Kadenyuk
editPersonal Cosmonaut Leonid Kadenukz mission NASA STS-87
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c "Житомирський обласний музей космонавтики ім. С.П. Корольова". Управління культури Житомирської обласної державної адміністрації. Department of Culture, Zhytomyr Regional Administration. 2006. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
- ^ a b c d "Подорож у минуле". Музей космонавтики ім. С.П. Корольова Житомирської обласної Ради. Serhiy Pavlovych Korolyov Museum of Cosmonautics. 2013. Retrieved 2016-07-17.