The Soviet Union planned several military Soyuz spacecraft models. These versions were named Soyuz P, Soyuz PPK, Soyuz R, Soyuz 7K-VI, and Soyuz OIS (Orbital Research Station). However, none of the spacecraft ever flew in space.[1][2]
Soyuz P, R and PPK
editSoyuz P
editThe Soyuz P (Perekhvatchik, Interceptor) space interceptor and Soyuz R (Razvedki, intelligence) command-reconnaissance spacecraft was proposed in December 1962 by Sergei Korolev. In the initial draft project, the Soyuz P would use the Soyuz 9K rocket stage and Soyuz 11K tanker spacecraft to conduct a series of dockings and re-fueling operations. The complete complex would then conduct intercepts of enemy satellites in orbits up to 6,000 km in altitude. Soyuz P was cancelled in 1963. [3]
Soyuz R
editThe Soyuz-R system (1963-1966) consisted of two separately launched spacecraft, including the small orbital station 11F71 with photo-reconnaissance and electronic intelligence equipment and a Soyuz 7K-TK for crew transport. Soyuz R was cancelled in 1966.[4]
Soyuz PPK
editInitially the Soyuz P was designed for piloted inspection and destruction of enemy satellites. It was intended that the Soyuz would rendezvous with the target satellite. To minimize risk to the crew, a new version, Soyuz PPK (pilotiruemovo korablya-perekhvatchika, crewed interceptor spacecraft) was later proposed in 1964.[5]
Soyuz 7K-VI Zvezda
editThe Zvezda (star) station was based on a radically modified Soyuz begun in October 1965. Dmitri Kozlov was the chief engineer of the Soyuz VI project, he also worked on Soyuz-P and Soyuz-R. Soyuz 7K-VI objectives were crew earth observation, orbital inspection and destruction of enemy satellites. Zvezda would be powered by two plutonium radioisotope thermoelectric generators, as solar arrays required the spacecraft to be position to the sun, not a desired attack mode. Also the military experiments need more power than solar provided. Soyuz 7K-VI had a recoilless gun for defense. It was designed for shooting in a vacuum and defending the military research spacecraft from enemy satellite inspector and interceptor satellites. The gun was aimed by maneuvering the entire spacecraft. A special gunsight was installed in the descent module for aiming the gun. A forward docking apparatus to allow docking with Almaz was also included. Work on Zvezda was cancelled in 1967 with a single prototype in advanced stages of construction. Cosmonaut training for the VI began in September 1966. The cosmonaut group selected included commander Pavel Popovich, pilot Alexei Gubarev, flight-engineers Yuri Artyukhin, Vladimir Gulyaev, Boris Nikolaevich Belousov, and Gennadiy Kolesnikov. Popovich-Kolesnikov and Gubarev-Belousov were the prime crews, with the other engineers acting as reserves and then assigned to later crews.[6][7]
Soyuz OIS (Orbital Research Station)
editThe Soyuz OIS (Orbital Research Station) would consist of a separately-launched orbital block 11F731 OB-VI and a transport Soyuz 7K-S.
Soyuz OB-VI
editThe Soyuz OB-VI would be launched for 30-day missions in a 51.6° orbit at 250 x 270 km. Power was provided by solar panels, and the payload included 700 to 1,000 kg of instrumentation. The total mass would be around 6,500 kg (14,300 lb).[8]
Soyuz 7K-S
editThe initial Soyuz 7K-S program was to consist of four uncrewed, followed by two crewed test flights, then two operational launches. Cosmonauts were assigned to the project in 1973.[6]
In 1975, the project was cancelled. At that time the launch escape system for 7K-S was ready and was used for Apollo-Soyuz Test Project flights. Three complete vehicles were launched as uncrewed test missions:
Mission | Crew | Launch | Landing | Duration | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kosmos 670 | None | 6 Aug 1974, 00:02 |
8 Aug 1974, 23:59 |
2 days, 23 hours and 57 minutes | [6] |
Kosmos 772 | None | 29 Sept 1975, 04:15 |
3 Oct 1975, 04:10 |
3 days, 23 hours and 55 minutes | [6] |
Kosmos 869 | None | 29 Nov 1976, 16:00 |
17 Dec 1976, 10:31 |
17 days, 18 hours and 31 minutes | [6] |
Soyuz 7K-ST
editThe Soyuz 7K-ST transport project was develop in parallel to the military 7K-S and was redesigned for a crew of three, eventually becoming the Soyuz-T used with the Salyut space stations.[9]
Specifications
editRelation with other Soyuz versions
editThe list below shows proposed, flown (in bold) and military (in italic) Soyuz versions.
- Soyuz A (1963)
- Soyuz 7K-OK (1967-71)
- Soyuz 7K-OKS (1971)
- Soyuz 7K-T (1973-81)
- Soyuz 7K-TM (1975)
- Soyuz 7K-OKS (1971)
- Soyuz 7K-LOK (1967)
- Soyuz 7K-L1 (1967-70)
- Soyuz 7K-L1E (1970-71)
- Soyuz 7K-L1 (1967-70)
- Soyuz P (1962)
- Soyuz PPK (1964)
- Soyuz R (1962)
- Soyuz 7K-TK (1966)
- Soyuz 7K-VI Zvezda (1964)
- Soyuz OIS (1967)
- Soyuz OB-VI (1967)
- Soyuz 7K-S (1974)
- Soyuz 7K-ST (1974)
- Soyuz T (1976-86)
- Soyuz TM (1986-02)
- Soyuz TMA (2002-12)
- Soyuz TMA-M (2010-16)
- Soyuz MS (2016-...)
- Soyuz 7K-OK (1967-71)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ David S.F. Portree (1995). Mir Hardware Heritage (PDF). NASA. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 March 2023.
- ^ I. B. Afanasyev (27 May 1992) [December 1991]. "Unknown Spacecraft (From the History of the Soviet Space Program)". What's New in Life, Science, and Technology: Space Program and Astronomy Series (12). Central Eurasia (JPRS-USP-92003): JPRS Report, Science & Technology: 6.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Mark Wade. "Soyuz P". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
- ^ Mark Wade. "Soyuz R". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
- ^ Mark Wade. "Soyuz PPK". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
- ^ a b c d e Mark Wade. "Soyuz 7K-S". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
- ^ Mark Wade. "Soyuz VI". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
- ^ Mark Wade. "Soyuz OB-VI". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
- ^ Mark Wade. "Soyuz T". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
External links
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