Original source : http://all-that-is-interesting.com
Posted : October 2014
Author : Chris Altman
Soyuz and Salyut Docking in Space (Artist’s Rendering). |
There exists only one video of what followed Soyuz 11’s
violent decompression. In it, we see two men sprawled over white sheets,
helpless on the dead grasses of the Kazakh steppe. Their faces are obscured by
the sweating, heaving medics huddled over them, performing the kiss of life,
frantically trying to save them: but their essences had been sucked out in a
silent flash. Their skin is as gray and lifeless as the ground they lay upon.
All crewmen were lost.
The Salyut-1 (“salute”, “fanfare”) was intended to be one of
the USSR ’s defining blows to
the United States
in the Cold War. The first space station of any kind was going to be a Soviet
one, and the eager Soviets had already sent a team of three men to occupy it.
It was a hasty decision: the Soviet team had recently abandoned their lunar
mission plans, and were in a mad dash to show the world that they could still
make firsts in space. From the initial design phases to the actual launch of
Salyut-1, only 16 months had passed.
Crew of Space Station Salyut-1/Soyuz 11 |
The first manned flight to Salyut-1 was the Soyuz 10. There
was a malfunction in the docking procedure and the mission had to be
scrapped. Soyuz 11 was the second attempt, and the world was leaning forward in
their seats as the crew successfully completed its three-hour docking procedure
with Salyut on June 7th, 1971. But the three men: Vladislav Volkov, Georgy
Dobrovolsky, and Viktor Patsayev, were greeted with a troubling sight: the
space station was filled with smoke.
Luckily, it was a minor glitch, and the crew spent the night in the Soyuz after
repairs were completed to the ventilation system and the air was allowed
to clear. The mission could properly begin. The men spent their time onboard
performing experiments on their bodies and the ship itself, testing
their limits to see the effects of spaceflight on the human body and the
efficacy of the systems with which the cosmonauts had been equipped. Everything
was going relatively smoothly, the men confident that their smoky welcome was
to be the only problem.
But this was a mission that seemed cursed from the
beginning. An electrical fire 11 days into the mission was just another sign
that this was not going to be a typical or safe endeavor. After defying the
odds, enduring two major glitches, and staying a record-breaking 22 days in
orbit, the crew of Soyuz 11 had to cut their time aboard Salyut short.
Like the tragedy of Apollo 1, many of the problems onboard
the Salyut were a result of hastiness and hubris. It was the Cold War and the
Americans were miles ahead of the Soviets. This was their opportunity to remind
the world that the USSR
was a force to be reckoned with, that they had not been defeated. Corners were
cut for the sake of being “first”. But, the men had done it: they had spent 23
days in space, proving that long-term spaceflight was indeed possible. The only
thing left to do was to go home and earn their place in the walls of the
Kremlin. Sadly, the men would do so sooner rather than later.
Apollo 1 capsule destroyed by fire. All three crewmen killed. |
The men took their seats, ensuring that all hatches were
sealed and pressurized for the detachment from Salyut-1; but there was a
third problem. The “hatch-open” indicator was flashing. Numerous attempts were
made to reorient and seal the capsule, but to all eyes the hatch seemed sealed.
Eventually, after a bit of fiddling, the light went out, and the Soyuz detached
from Salyut-1.
They orbited Earth for three hours before attempting to make
their descent into the atmosphere. The men were in good spirits as they began
their re-entry checklists; one of them asked to be greeted back on Earth with a
glass of cognac, a tradition for Russians coming back home. Then, with a
quick gesture, the coordinates were entered into the Soyuz’s guidance system,
and the men were ready to jettison the service module of the Soyuz and fall
with fiery fanfare back to the Earth.
A familiar hiss and crash is heard over the radio as the
three pieces of the Soyuz separate. Radio silence. Too much silence for a
typical re-entry: the cosmonauts are supposed to give regular radio commands,
just to ensure that they’re still alive.
Russian medical personnel administer CPR to the dead crew of Soyuz 11 in a futile event to revive them. |
Thankfully, they instantly lost consciousness. The spit on
their tongue bubbled into vapor. Their blood boiled just the same, absorbed
into surrounding tissues. That’s what happened to Volkov, Dobrovolsky, and
Patsayev on this grim morning in June: their essences were sucked right out,
ventilated into space. Their bodies may forever rest in the walls of the Kremlin,
but their spirits were spit out into the stars.
~Blog Admin~
No comments:
Post a Comment