Station statistics | |
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Crew | 2 |
Launch | 29 July 1972 03:21 UTC |
Launch pad | LC-81/24, Baikonur Cosmodrome, USSR |
Mass | 18,425 kg (40,620 lb) |
Length | 14 m |
Width | 4.15 m |
Pressurised volume | c.100 m³ (3,500 ft³) |
Days in orbit | 0 days (Launch failure) |
References: | |
Configuration | |
Planned orbital configuration of DOS-2 | |
DOS-2 was a space station, launched as part of the Salyut programme, which was lost in a launch failure on 29 July 1972, when the failure of the second stage of its Proton-K launch vehicle prevented the station from achieving orbit. It instead fell into the Pacific Ocean. The station, which would have been given the designation Salyut 2 had it reached orbit, was structurally identical to Salyut 1, as it had been assembled as a backup unit for that station. Four teams of cosmonauts were formed to crew the station, of which two would have flown:
- Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov
- Vasily Lazarev and Oleg Makarov
- Aleksei Gubarev and Georgi Grechko
- Pyotr Klimuk and Vitaly Sevastyanov
Whilst Salyut 1 had been attempted to be visited by two three-person crews (Soyuz 10 and Soyuz 11), following modifications to the Soyuz 7KT-OK spacecraft (resulting in the new model Soyuz 7K-T) following the deaths of the crew of Soyuz 11, the spacecraft could only carry two cosmonauts, thus DOS-2 would have had two crews of two. Following the loss of the station, the crews were transferred to the DOS-3 programme.
References
- ^ Grujica S. Ivanovich (2008). Salyut: The First Space Station. Springer-Praxis. ISBN 978-0-387-73585-6.
- David Portree (1995). "Mir Hardware Heritage" (PDF). NASA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-09-07.
- "Central Intelligence Bulletin: USSR 29 Jul 72, 7" (PDF). CIA. 1972.
- "Central Intelligence Bulletin: USSR 29 Jul 72, 8" (PDF). CIA. 1972.
Salyut programme | ||
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Salyut stations (DOS) | ||
Almaz stations (OPS) |
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TKS spacecraft | ||
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Notes: † Never inhabited due to launch or on-orbit failure, ‡ Part of the Almaz military program, ° Never inhabited, lacks docking mechanism. |
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