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Conference 7.286::space

Title:Space Exploration
Notice:Shuttle launch schedules, see Note 6
Moderator:PRAGMA::GRIFFIN
Created:Mon Feb 17 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:974
Total number of notes:18843

700.0. "Salyut-7 ReEntry" by CSS::BIRO () Wed Feb 06 1991 09:16

I though I would open up a note for the Salyut-7 re-entry
    
    TASS says Salyut7 xhould deorbit between 1700 UTC on the 6 of FEB
    and 2100 UTC on the 7th of FEB.
    
    Blagov/Gorshkov have all said that there is a reentry capsule
    on the Saylut 7 complex, but this has not been confirmed.
    
    the latest els set for S7:
    
    
    Salyut 7        27.0  4.2  0.0 (Launch 19-82-33A)   Set:  781, Obj:  13138
          Epoch Year: 1991  Day:  36.339409550    Orbit #   50173
          Inclination  =  51.57650000     R.A.A.N      = 173.81400000
          Eccentricity =   0.00052150     Arg of Per   = 283.46360000
          Mean Anomaly =  76.64260000     Mean Motion  =  16.34825073
          Drag         =  0.23507E-01     Frequency    =       19.954
          S.M.A.       =    6557.7005     Anom Period  =      88.0828
          Apogee Ht    =     182.9603     Perigee Ht   =     176.1206

    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
700.1Brief history of SALYUT 7ADVAX::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Wed Feb 06 1991 11:0096
From: [email protected] (WILLIAM HARWOOD, UPI Science Writer)
Newsgroups: clari.tw.space,clari.news.aviation,clari.news.top
Subject: Soviet space station falling to Earth
Date: 5 Feb 91 20:17:17 GMT
  
	Radar tracking indicated an abandoned Soviet space station
would plunge back to Earth late Wednesday or early Thursday, but
officials said any chunks of the 21-ton craft that survived the
hellish re-entry likely would fall harmlessly into the ocean. 

	The Salyut 7 space station, launched April 19, 1982, was
abandoned June 25, 1986, after major efforts to fix a variety of
problems plaguing the aging orbital outpost, which was designed to
have a lifetime of just four to five years. 

	Tom Niemann, a spokesman for U.S. Space Command in Colorado
Springs, Colo., said radar tracking indicated the cylindrical space
station and an abandoned re-entry module likely would fall into the
atmosphere sometime between 4:18 p.m. EST Wednesday and 4:18 a.m.
Thursday. 

	The actual computer projection, subject to change, listed
re-entry at 10:18 p.m. Wednesday, plus or minus six hours.  Should
re-entry actually occur at 10:18 p.m., pieces of the space station
would fall harmlessly into the Pacific Ocean well east of New Zealand,
Niemann said. 

	``There is a re-entry module on board that weighs about 3
tons,'' he said. ``So it will likely survive re-entry. Right now, the
most likely area is over the Pacific Ocean, which certainly minimizes
the risk to populated areas.'' 

	Despite the small risk, the Federal Emergency Management
Agency in Washington said it was monitoring the re-entry so the agency
could warn state and local governments if debris were to land in the
United States. 

	``Although there are few protective actions which could be
taken should a large piece of the space station strike the ground ...
state and local planners need to be kept informed and advised until
the satellite no longer poses a threat,'' the agency said. 

	As of Tuesday, radar tracking showed Salyut 7 in an 88-minute
orbit tilted 52 degrees to the equator with a high point of 111.2
miles and a low point of just 107.5 miles. For comparison, space
shuttles typically operate at altitudes of 160 miles or so. 

	At Salyut 7's altitude, friction with the tenuous outer reaches 
of Earth's atmosphere acts like a brake, slowing the spacecraft and 
causing it to lose still more altitude.  Without rocket power to boost 
its orbit, Salyut 7 was doomed to burn up in the atmosphere. 

	But like NASA's Skylab space station, Salyut 7 is so large
that re-entry heat was not expected to completely destroy the
spacecraft and especially massive chunks were expected to make it 
all the way to Earth's surface, be it water or land. 

	Skylab burned up over the southern Indian Ocean in 1979 and
while small pieces of debris hit the ground in western Australia, no
one was injured. 

	It is believed that Salyut 7 was built as a backup to Salyut 6
and later modified for space flight.  It ultimately was launched by a
Proton booster from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Soviet Central Asia. 

	According to Dennis Newkirk's Almanac of Soviet Manned Space
Flight, Salyut 7 was equipped with high-efficiency solar cells,
providing 10 percent more power than those used by Salyut 6, and two
docking ports on either end of the cylindrical main structure. 

	Capable of automated refueling, Salyut 7 was launched with at
least 22 scientific and engineering experiments on board, including
materials processing furnaces, a variety of high-tech camera systems,
an X-ray spectrometer, an experimental submarine-tracking radar system
and an X-ray telescope. Three of the experiments were supplied by France. 

	During its orbital lifetime, Salyut 7 was visited by seven
cosmonaut crews between 1982 and the end of 1984, including short
stays by French and Indian guest fliers and Svetlana Savitskaya, the
first woman to walk in space. 

	On March 2, 1985, the Soviets announced that Salyut 7 had
completed its mission.  But they later changed their minds and
announced plans to attempt a daring spacewalk repair mission to
overcome a power loss and other problems. 

	In one of the boldest orbital repair flights ever attempted,
Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savinykh carried out multiple
spacewalks and worked in below-freezing temperatures to revive the
space station, finally succeeding in restoring power and heat. 

	A ninth crew visited Salyut 7 later in 1985 and again in 1986
when cosmonauts aboard the newer Mir space station paid a brief visit.
The space station was abandoned when the last crew departed on June 25, 
1986. 

700.2NY Times page A6CSS::BIROWed Feb 06 1991 15:226
    According to a NY Times articel today (page A6 Wed Feb 6)
    the Decent capsule weight after reentry burning would be between 2600
    and 4400 pounds, James E Oberg speculates that it is a Gemini size
    capsule that is used for return of film and other materials to earth.
    
    
700.330086::REITHJim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02Wed Feb 06 1991 15:383
    Any speculation why this capsule wasn't jettisoned and reentered in a
    control fashion prior to now? I would think that having it fall in a
    known manner prior to this would have been preferable...
700.4Re-entry occurs either today or tomorrowADVAX::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Wed Feb 06 1991 15:4245
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Salyut 7 to reenter Feb. 6-7
Date: 6 Feb 91 08:31:00 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: The Internet 
 
     The Soviets have announced that the older Salyut 7 space station
will re-enter Earth's atmosphere sometime on Feb. 6-7, according to
Radio Moscow.  On Feb. 4, the station had an altitude of 200 Km (125
mi). The Salyut 7 complex currently consists of the Salyut 7 main
body, launched in April 1982, and the Kosmos 1686 expansion module
(added in Oct. 1985), for a combined mass of about 40 Tonnes. 
According to mission control, only the 2 tonne re-entry module still
attached to the station will survive the atmosphere.  The exact point
of re-entry will not be known until about 4 hours before but could
range anywhere between 51.6 degrees north and south latitudes.  The
head of NPO Energiya has stated that there are no radioactive or other
dangerous chemicals left on board.  There is no fuel left on board to
control the re-entry, but radio control will be maintained to try and
make it come down in ocean areas. 

     The Salyut 7 complex hosted 10 Soyuz missions for a total of 712
days of occupation during its 1,529 day operational period.  Some
1,821 man days of crew time were spent on it.  It was not without
problems, suffering a problem with the fueling system in Aug. 1983,
and a major failure of the solar power system which required an
emergency repair flight by the Soyuz T-13 crew in June 1985.  It was
last visited in May 1986 by the Soyuz T-15 crew of Leoind Kizim and
Vladimir Solovyov.  That flight was actually a transfer from the Mir
station to Salyut 7, and back again.  In Aug. 1986 Salyut 7 was
boosted into a 492 x 474 km (309 x 296 mi) orbit, with the intention
of being recovered by their Buran space shuttle.  However, like Skylab
before it, delays in the shuttle program prevented such an attempt,
and a Progress tanker mission to allow a controlled re-entry was
scratched due to lack of funds. (Radio Moscow Feb 4/5, Spaceflight Feb
1991) 

     A sad end to a station that for four years was the only
semipermanent base of humankind in space. 
 
                                                       Glenn Chapman
                                                       Simon Fraser Univ.
                                                       [email protected]

700.5Re-entry time updateADVAX::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Wed Feb 06 1991 15:4731
    From:	DECWRL::"[email protected]"  6-FEB-1991 15:31:14.74
    Subj:	Salyut 7 reentry now 1:00 - 8:00 UTC Feb 7th 

    The Soviets have updated the times for the reentry of the older
Salyut 7 space station.  At 18:00 UTC (10 am PST) Radio Moscow stated
that Salyut 7 would enter the atmosphere between 1:00 and 8:00 hours
UTC on Feb. 7th (5 pm Feb 6th - 1 am Feb 7th PST).  Exact
determination of reentry will not be possible until an orbit or two
before it occurs.  Orbital period is about 87.6 minutes currently by
my calculations (assuming a circular orbit).  At the time of the 18:00
report it was stated the complex was at 160 Km altitude, which means
it has fallen 40 Km since the Feb. 4th announcement. 

    The Salyut 7 complex currently consists of the Salyut 7 main body,
and the Kosmos 1686 expansion module for a combined mass of about 40
Tonnes.  This is expected to disintegrate, with about 250 pieces in
the kilogram (2.2 pound) range hitting Earth from most of the
facility.  The major worry is the 2 tonne reentry module on the Kosmos
1686 which will probably survive intact.  Soviet mission control is in
contact with the several international agencies to provide warning in
the affected areas.  Little comment was made about the mission centre
trying to control the reentry point this time (as compared to the Feb.
5th announcement).  Perhaps they have tried some adjustments and got 
nowhere. 

     This should be a real fireball when it comes down.
 
                                                       Glenn Chapman
                                                       Simon Fraser Univ.
                                                       [email protected]
 
700.6Re-entry tonight from Italy to USSRADVAX::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Wed Feb 06 1991 17:37117
From: [email protected] (Ron Baalke)
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro
Subject: Salyut 7
Date: 6 Feb 91 21:11:26 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA.
  
     The latest word about Salyut 7 from the U.S. Space Command is
that it will re-enter the atmosphere over the Mediterranean Sea today
(February 6) at about 8:15 PM (PST).  This prediction has an
uncertainty of plus or minus two hours.  If the prediction holds true,
then Salyut 7 will be over northern Italy as it make its entry, and
any debris reaching Earth would fall over Eastern Europe or the Soviet
Union.  It is also unlikely that the troops in the Persian Gulf would
be able to see the expected fireball. 

      ___    _____     ___
     /_ /|  /____/ \  /_ /|      Ron Baalke         | [email protected]
     | | | |  __ \ /| | | |      Jet Propulsion Lab | 
  ___| | | | |__) |/  | | |___   M/S 301-355        | It's 10PM, do you know
 /___| | | |  ___/    | |/__ /|  Pasadena, CA 91109 | where your spacecraft is?
 |_____|/  |_|/       |_____|/                      | We do!


From: [email protected] (WILLIAM HARWOOD, UPI Science Writer)
Newsgroups: clari.tw.space,clari.news.aviation,clari.news.military
Subject: Radars track falling Soviet space station
Date: 6 Feb 91 20:02:38 GMT
  
	Radar tracking indicated an abandoned Russian space station would
plunge back into the atmosphere over Italy and the Mediterranean late
Wednesday, possibly showering hundreds of small fragments over Eastern
Europe or the Soviet Union, officials said.

	While the hellish fire of re-entry was expected to destroy most of
the unmanned 21-ton Salyut 7 space station, the Soviet news agency Tass
predicted some 250 small pieces of debris would survive the fall to
strike the Earth somewhere along the spacecraft's path.

	U.S. Space Command, which uses a network of powerful radars to track
thousands of satellites and space debris in low-Earth orbit, predicted
Salyut 7 would re-enter the atmosphere during a pass over the
Mediterranean Sea around 11:15 p.m. EST Wednesday. Officials stressed
the prediction had an uncertainty of plus or minus two hours.

	But assuming the prediction was correct, the big space station was
expected to begin feeling the fire of re-entry while passing over the
northern third of Italy along a trajectory carrying it from the
southwest to the northeast. The satellite's ground track was inclined 52
degrees to the equator.

	``If you divided Italy into thirds (re-entry will come over) the
upper thirds,'' said Tom Niemann, a spokesman for U.S. Space Command in
Colorado Springs, Colo. ``That's impact with the Earth's atmosphere.
That's where it begins its re-entry.''

	Salyut 7 is the largest satellite to fall back to Earth since NASA's
Skylab space station re-entered and burned up in 1979, showering debris
over the Indian Ocean and sparsely populated areas of western Australia.

	Satellite trackers typically discuss re-entries in terms of a 
``footprint'' 1,000 miles long and 100 miles wide because of
uncertainties involving a variety of hard-to-predict factors, including
the spacecraft's orientation in space.

	Where debris might hit the ground is, therefore, almost impossible to
predict in advance. But Niemann said if Salyut 7 re-entered over
northern Italy, debris would fall over Eastern Europe or the Soviet
Union. He said troops stationed in the Persian Gulf likely would be
unable to see the fiery fall to Earth.

	``We don't have good experience to draw on to say what the ground
footprint is,'' he said. ``What we also don't have much experience with
is an object this size. Who knows what it's going to do when it hits the
atmosphere. Something traveling that fast, I wouldn't want something the
size of a ball bearing (to hit).''

	Where debris might fall was based on a variety of factors. For
example, falling satellites can ``skip'' into the atmosphere like a flat
rock bounced across still water.

	``Two, it could do what we call post-holing where it hits and comes
in like a kamikaze pilot,'' Niemann said. ``Or three, it achieves some
kind of glide path. If it comes in ... normally, whether or not it
begins to tumble or spin'' affects where debris might fall.

	The Soviet news agency Tass said researchers ``calculated that about
250 fragments will fall to Earth, with each weighing several (pounds).''

	Salyut 7, which has no radioactive material aboard, was launched into
an orbit roughly 146 miles high. By early Wednesday, its orbital
altitude was between 103 miles and just 96 miles, subjecting the craft
to severe friction with the tenuous outer reaches of the atmosphere.

	At Salyut 7's altitude, such friction acts like a brake, slowing the
spacecraft and causing it to lose still more altitude. Without rocket
power to boost its orbit, Salyut 7 was doomed to burn up in the atmosphere.

	But like NASA's Skylab space station, Salyut 7 was so large that re-
entry heat was not expected to completely destroy the spacecraft and
chunks were expected to make it all the way to Earth's surface, be it
water or land.

	Skylab burned up over the southern Indian Ocean in 1979 and while
small pieces of debris hit the ground in western Australia, no one was
injured.

	Salyut 7, launched April 19, 1982, was abandoned June 25, 1986, after
major efforts to fix a variety of problems plaguing the orbital outpost,
which was designed to have a lifetime of just four to five years.

	The station was launched with at least 22 scientific and engineering
experiments on board, including materials processing furnaces, a variety
of high-tech camera systems, an X-ray spectrometer, an experimental
submarine-tracking radar system and an X-ray telescope. Three of the
experiments were supplied by France.

700.7world is getting smaller...49200::TONINATOpizza e pastasciuttaThu Feb 07 1991 04:456
FWIW on the radio this morning they said Salyout crashed on the border
between Argentina and Uruguay...
;-) I didn't know those countries were so close to Italy and Eastern Europe ;-)

GLT
700.8S7 is downCSS::BIROThu Feb 07 1991 06:4735
 
UPn  02/06 2339  Soviet space station falls to Earth
 
By WILLIAM HARWOOD
 UPI Science Writer
   An abandoned Soviet space station crashed back into the atmosphere over
South America late Wednesday, presumably showering debris over parts of
Argentina instead of Europe or the Soviet Union as originally expected,
officials said.
   "It came in hard (and) it came in fast," said Tom Niemann, a spokesman
for U.S. Space Command. "I imagine it was a fairly spectacular sight."
   Re-entry began at 10:44 p.m. EST and while the hellish fire of
atmospheric friction was expected to destroy most of the unmanned massive
Salyut 7 space station, the Soviet news agency Tass predicted some 250
small pieces of debris would survive the fall to strike Earth somewhere
along the spacecraft's path.
   The derelict space station was traveling from southwest to northeast and
had just flown over the border between Chile and Argentina when re- entry
began.
   "The ground trace is that if something survived re-entry, there would
have been landfall in central Argentina," Niemann said by telephone from
U.S. Space Command in Colorado. "But that's going to take some reports from
that area before we can confirm that."
   U.S. Space Command, which uses a network of powerful radars to track
thousands of satellites and space debris in low-Earth orbit, predicted
early Wednesday that Salyut 7 would re-enter the atmosphere during a pass
over Italy and the Mediterranean around 11:15 p.m. EST.
 



So at this point, 0344z looks to be the time of re entry.  Now we wait
for the news of debris.
 
    
700.9s7-moreCSS::BIROThu Feb 07 1991 07:0516
    The HF radio beacon on 19.954 MHZ died, I think last summer,
    thus it is believed that there has been a failure on the
    space complex. Since that time there has been no changes in
    Salyut-7 complex orbit except what was expected from normal
    decay.  So it is believed that the Soviets have lost communication
    and control of S-7 Complex that is why I think they were not
    able to return the capsule.  Plus I don't know if this type of
    capsule can be remotely controlled.
    
    The big puzzle in this, is the TASS article stating that they
    were still in communication with S-7, so there are still some
    mixed feeling on this matter.
    
    john
    
    
700.10S-7 Ground trackCSS::BIROThu Feb 07 1991 07:06100
    just to get an idea of the ground track I ran the latest elset
    and possible the last one for Salyut-7 complex
    
1
     AMSAT Elliptical Orbit Calculator
     V. 43, VAX FORTRAN adaptation by KA1IU, of W3IWI BASIC Program
     Copyright 1983,1984,1985,1986,1987  by AMSAT, W3IWI, KA1IU


     Reference Epoch:  1991 +   37.680653680

     Starting Epoch:   1991 +   38.000000000
                       MON/DAY/YR= 2/ 7/91 at 00:00 UTC

     Element Set  1: Salyut 7    (OBJ 13138  Set:  792)                          

     Fundamental Keplerian Elements:

                              At Reference             At Start

     Mean Anomaly deg         83.060100000            175.090048803
     Inclination deg          51.576200000
     Eccentricity              0.000610700
     Mean Motion rev/day      16.448578900             16.484221781
     Arg. Perigee deg        276.960000000            278.328577355
     R.A.A.N. deg            166.235300000            164.408442850

     Other Parameters:

     Orbit Number          50194                    50199
     S.M.A. km              6531.008                 6521.590
     Apogee Height km        156.836
     Perigee Height km       148.859
     Anom. Period min         87.546
     Decay Rate rev/day^2      5.581E-02
     Doppler Freq mhz         19.954


     Argument of perigee will rotate 360 degrees
     in about     0 years,  84 days.

     Earth angle subtended:      Apogee   Perigee
                                   25.2      24.5 deg

     For observer at   42.6 deg lat,    71.4 deg long,
     visibility circle at average of apogee and perigee height is:

       Northern limit:    55.0 deg latitude
       Center:            42.0
       Southern limit:    30.2

     (Values>90 are on far side of pole. Negative=South Lat.)
     (Center is for circle on stereographic map projection.)



     Exact time of apogee indicated by A after UTC in output.
1
     K1KSY   Lat=   42.622 Long=   71.403  Ht=  60.m  Window Limit=  0.0 deg
     Element Set  1: Salyut 7    (OBJ 13138  Set:  792)                          
     Doppler shift calculated for     19.954 mhz

     Current     Arg Perigee        R.A.A.N.          Period          S.M.A.
                    278.3251        164.4130         87.4508        6526.294

     Eqx Time = ****:**             Eqx Long = ******

      U.T.C.    AZ   EL  DOPPLER  RANGE   HEIGHT   LAT   LONG  PHASE
     HHMM:SS   deg  deg     hz      km      km    N+S-   W+E-  <256>
      2/ 7/91 THU               -----DAY #  38----ORBIT #  50199----
     0331:00   232-57.0     103   10845     143  -44.2  155.5   230
     0332:00   228-56.2     114   10747     143  -46.1  150.6   233
     0333:00   224-55.3     124   10640     142  -47.8  145.3   236
     0334:00   220-54.4     135   10523     142  -49.2  139.7   239
     0335:00   217-53.4     145   10397     142  -50.3  133.8   242
     0336:00   213-52.4     155   10262     142  -51.1  127.7   245
     0337:00   209-51.4     164   10118     142  -51.5  121.4   248
     0338:00   206-50.3     173    9966     142  -51.5  115.0   251
     0339:00   203-49.1     182    9806     142  -51.2  108.6   254
     0340:00   199-48.0     190    9638     142  -50.5  102.5     1
     0341:00   196-46.8     198    9464     142  -49.5   96.5     4
     0342:00   193-45.6     205    9282     142  -48.1   90.8     7
     0343:00   190-44.4     212    9094     142  -46.4   85.5     9
     0344:00   187-43.2     217    8901     142  -44.5   80.5    12
     0345:00   183-41.9     223    8703     142  -42.4   75.9    15
     0346:00   180-40.7     227    8501     142  -40.1   71.6    18
     0347:00   177-39.4     230    8295     142  -37.6   67.7    21
     0348:00   174-38.2     232    8086     142  -35.0   64.0    24
     0349:00   170-37.0     234    7877     143  -32.2   60.5    27
     0350:00   167-35.8     234    7666     143  -29.4   57.3    30
     0351:00   164-34.6     233    7456     143  -26.5   54.3    33
     0352:00   160-33.4     230    7248     143  -23.4   51.4    36
     0353:00   157-32.2     226    7043     143  -20.4   48.7    39
     0354:00   153-31.1     220    6842     144  -17.3   46.1    42
     0355:00   149-30.1     212    6648     144  -14.1   43.6    45
     0356:00   145-29.1     203    6462     144  -10.9   41.1    48
     0357:00   141-28.1     191    6285     144   -7.7   38.8    50
     0358:00   137-27.2     177    6120     145   -4.5   36.4    53
     0359:00   132-26.4     161    5968     145   -1.3   34.1    56
    
700.11Sigh. More space history in the incinerator. Maybe I can get a piece to put beside my hunk of SkylabDECWIN::FISHERPursuing an untamed ornothoidThu Feb 07 1991 13:0013
What seems a bit amusing to me is the reports that it was expected to reenter
over Italy at some certain time within 2 hours.  4 hours is about 3 orbits.  That
means that if it can land anytime within those 4 hours, it can land anywhere in
a hoop around the earth inclined at 50-whatever degrees and roughly 60 degrees
(360 degrees / (4/24)) thick.

Of course, it is probably more likely to reenter at its perigee, but in that
case, there should have been about 3 discrete times, not a continuous 4-hour
time.

Picky, picky.

Burns
700.12The complete articleADVAX::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Thu Feb 07 1991 16:08100
From: [email protected] (WILLIAM HARWOOD, UPI Science Writer)
Newsgroups: clari.tw.space,clari.news.aviation,clari.news.military
Subject: Soviet space station falls to Earth
Date: 7 Feb 91 07:43:01 GMT
  
	An abandoned Soviet space station crashed back into the
atmosphere over South America late Wednesday, presumably showering
debris over parts of Argentina instead of Europe or the Soviet Union
as originally expected, officials said. 

	``It came in hard (and) it came in fast,'' said Tom Niemann, a
spokesman for U.S. Space Command. ``I imagine it was a fairly
spectacular sight.'' 

	Re-entry began at 11:44 p.m. EST and while the hellish fire of
atmospheric friction was expected to destroy most of the unmanned
massive Salyut 7 space station, the Soviet news agency Tass predicted
some 250 small pieces of debris would survive the fall to strike Earth
somewhere along the spacecraft's path. 

	The derelict space station was traveling from southwest to
northeast and had just flown over the border between Chile and
Argentina when re-entry began. 

	``The ground trace is that if something survived re-entry,
there would have been landfall in central Argentina,'' Niemann said by
telephone from U.S. Space Command in Colorado. ``But that's going to
take some reports from that area before we can confirm that.'' 

	In Argentina, Radio America reported that a light blue-green
comet passed over the city of Pacheco in the north at 1:45 a.m. local
time. Pieces of the space station reportedly came down in the province
of Santa Cruz southwest of Buenos Aires near the village of Perito Moreno. 

	U.S. Space Command, which uses a network of powerful radars to
track thousands of satellites and space debris in low-Earth orbit,
predicted early Wednesday that Salyut 7 would re-enter the atmosphere
during a pass over Italy and the Mediterranean around 11:15 p.m. EST. 

	Later in the day, it became apparent that the massive space
station would re-enter earlier than originally expected. 

	Salyut 7 is the largest satellite to fall back to Earth since
NASA's Skylab space station re-entered and burned up in 1979,
showering debris over the Indian Ocean and sparsely populated areas of
western Australia. 

	Satellite trackers typically discuss re-entries in terms 
of a ``footprint'' 1,000 miles long and 100 miles wide because of
uncertainties involving a variety of hard-to-predict factors,
including the spacecraft's orientation in space. 

	Where debris might hit the ground is, therefore, almost
impossible to predict in advance. 

	``We don't have good experience to draw on to say what the
ground footprint is,'' he said. ``What we also don't have much
experience with is an object this size. Who knows what it's going to
do when it hits the atmosphere. Something traveling that fast, I
wouldn't want something the size of a ball bearing (to hit).'' 

	Where debris might fall was based on a variety of factors. For
example, falling satellites can ``skip'' into the atmosphere like a
flat rock bounced across still water. 

	``Two, it could do what we call post-holing where it hits and
comes in like a kamikaze pilot,'' Niemann said. ``Or three, it
achieves some kind of glide path.  If it comes in...normally, whether
or not it begins to tumble or spin'' affects where debris might fall. 

	The Soviet news agency Tass said researchers ``calculated that
about 250 fragments will fall to Earth, with each weighing several (pounds).'' 

	Salyut 7, which has no radioactive material aboard, was
launched into an orbit roughly 146 miles high. By early Wednesday, its
orbital altitude was between 103 miles and just 96 miles, subjecting
the craft to severe friction with the tenuous outer reaches of the
atmosphere. 

	At Salyut 7's altitude, such friction acts like a brake,
slowing the spacecraft and causing it to lose still more altitude.
Without rocket power to boost its orbit, Salyut 7 was doomed to burn
up in the atmosphere. 

	But like NASA's Skylab space station, Salyut 7 was so large
that re-entry heat was not expected to completely destroy the
spacecraft and chunks were expected to make it all the way to Earth's
surface, be it water or land. 

	Salyut 7, launched April 19, 1982, was abandoned June 25,
1986, after major efforts to fix a variety of problems plaguing the
orbital outpost, which was designed to have a lifetime of just four to
five years. 

	The station was launched with at least 22 scientific and
engineering experiments on board, including materials processing
furnaces, a variety of high-tech camera systems, an X-ray spectrometer, 
an experimental submarine-tracking radar system and an X-ray telescope. 
Three of the experiments were supplied by France. 

700.13Spaceship remains said found in ArgentinaPRAGMA::GRIFFINDave GriffinThu Feb 07 1991 17:3985
From: [email protected] (DANIEL DROSDOFF, UPI Senior Editor)
Date: 7 Feb 91 20:25:53 GMT

	BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -- Witnesses reported seeing the falling Soviet
Salyut 7 space laboratory blaze out of existence as it sped through the
atmosphere toward Argentine territory.
	A newspaper editor said smoking remains of the abandoned space
station were found in a garbage dump in the port of Puerto Madryn, 900
miles south of Buenos Aires.
	But official spokesmen of the Argentine army, navy, and air force
said they could not immediately confirm the location of the remains of
the spaceship debris.
	``A photographer, Ruben Huilipan, and two sports reporters saw the
fireball land as they came out of late basketball game in Puerto Madryn,
'' said Juan Carlos Rojas, editor of the newspaper Jornada of the city
of Trelew, just 35 miles south of Puerto Madryn.
	He said they drove toward where they believed the remains of the
space vehicle landed and came upon smoking metal debris that ignited
small fires in a garbage dump.
	``They returned to the site in the morning to take more photos,'' he
said.
	Several witnesses in the western Argentine province of San Juan also
reported seeing the disintegrating space laboratory blaze in the sky as
in fell southward.
	``I only saw it by accident,'' said Antonio Gamez, 32, in a telephone
interview from the city of San Juan, where he works as an advertising
employee for the newspaper El Diario de Cuyo.
	``I had just seen a movie on television and walked near the window to
light up a cigarette.
	``I noticed, about a quarter to 1 (a.m.) that what appeared to be an
opaque star was moving at the speed of an airplane.
	``It gradually got bigger in the sky and turned orange, leaving a
sparkling trail. It appeared to break up into seven or eight spheres
before it disappeared. It was like looking at a video games. It lasted
about 15 to 30 seconds in the sky. About 100 people in my neighborhood,
near the airport, saw it.''
	A San Juan provincial policeman, who identified himself as ``Officer
Fernandez,'' told a radio station that several other witnesses saw the
falling debris light up the sky.
	``For a moment, we thought it was a comet,'' he said.
	``Some said it was shining with five lights, others said seven
lights. One said it was like a plane falling in flames.''
	Several radio stations reported that witnesses also saw the ex-
satellite fall from the sky near the town of Perito Moreno, 1,000 miles
south of Buenos Aires, but an officer of the frontier police denied it.
	``None of us saw anything, and nobody told us they saw anything,''
said Commander Ruben Fernandez of the Perito Moreno detachment, when
contacted by phone by UPI.
	Tom Niemann, a spokesman for the U.S. Space Command, said the space
station came in hard and fast.
	``I imagine it was a fairly spectacular sight,'' he said.
	U.S. space officials have said the 40-ton Salyut 7 began re-entry
into the atmosphere at around 11:44 p.m. EST and split into 250 pieces
of debris. These experts predicted the remains would fall somewhere in
southern Argentina.
	The derelict space station was traveling from southwest to northeast
and had just flown over the border between Chile and Argentina when re-
entry began.
	``The ground trace is that if something survived re-entry, there
would have been landfall in central Argentina,'' Niemann said by
telephone from U.S. Space Command in Colorado. ``But that's going to
take some reports from that area before we can confirm that.''
	U.S. Space Command, which uses a network of powerful radars to track
thousands of satellites and space debris in low-Earth orbit, predicted
early Wednesday that Salyut 7 would re-enter the atmosphere during a
pass over Italy and the Mediterranean around 11:15 p.m. EST.
	Later in the day, it became apparent that the massive space station
would re-enter earlier than originally expected.
	Salyut 7 is the largest satellite to fall back to Earth since NASA's
Skylab space station re-entered and burned up in 1979, showering debris
over the Indian Ocean and sparsely populated areas of western Australia.
	Satellite trackers typically discuss re-entries in terms of a 
``footprint'' 1,000 miles long and 100 miles wide because of
uncertainties involving a variety of hard-to-predict factors, including
the spacecraft's orientation in space.
	Where debris might hit the ground is, therefore, almost impossible to
predict in advance.
	Salyut 7, launched April 19, 1982, was abandoned June 25, 1986, after
major efforts to fix a variety of problems plaguing the orbital outpost,
which was designed to have a lifetime of just four to five years.
	The station was launched with at least 22 scientific and engineering
experiments on board, including materials processing furnaces, a variety
of high-tech camera systems, an X-ray spectrometer, an experimental
submarine-tracking radar system and an X-ray telescope. Three of the
experiments were supplied by France.
700.14Update on SALYUT 7 return to EarthADVAX::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Mon Mar 18 1991 13:4126
From: [email protected] (Bruce Watson)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Salyut 7 in Argentina
Date: 16 Mar 91 19:00:41 GMT
Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co. 
 
    Spaceflight magazine (official publication of the British
Interplanetary Society) states: 
 
    "The Salyut 7 space station met its end shortly before 04.00 GMT
on February 7. According to the TASS news agency, the station plunged
into the Earth's atmosphere at latitude 34.9 degrees south, longitude
63.8 degrees west. A statement from the Argentine Defence Ministry
said that debris fell in the Paymun and Catriel districts in the
Neuquen province and the adjacent area in the La Pampa and Rio Negro
Provinces. 
 
    Eye witnesses described how they could see "fiery rain" as the
debris from the space station burnt up. A fragment "the size of a
washing machine" crashed into the backyard of a house in Rosario, the
Bueno Aires Herald reported."  
-- 
wats@scicom     | One of the things I like about this job is that I'm
                | never bothered by life-insurance salesmen.
                |                                      -- Red Adair

700.15History of SALYUT 7VERGA::KLAESSlaves to the Metal HordesMon Jul 20 1992 16:09205
Article: 46192
From: [email protected] (TIMOTHY FREER)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Salyut-7 diary
Date: 20 Jul 92 11:33:28 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
 
SALYUT-7 DIARY (April 1982 to Feb 1991)
-------------------------------
 
    This is the third in my series of 'Salyut' diaries. This particular
diary was compiled by Robert Christy, and was published in the June 1987
issue of the now defunct Space Flight News magazine. In his introduction,
Christy suggested that this was the first time a complete diary of major
events involving the Salyut-7 orbital laboratory had been published. The
listing includes all the launches to Salyut, all dockings, all docking port
transfers, all undockings and re-entries and all spacewalks.

    To make this diary complete I have added the date of Salyut-7's re-entry
which occured after the publication of the magazine article. I trust that
sci.space readers will find this diary to be a usefull resource.
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Salyut-7 diary (April 1982 to Feb 1991).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1982.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
19 APR    Salyut-7 launched by Proton rocket into 213 x 261km orbit at 51.6
          degrees inclination.
09 MAY    Salyut-7 established in its 350km, operational orbit.
13 MAY    Soyuz T-5 launched with Anatoly Berezovoi and Valentin Lebedev 
          aboard.
14 MAY    Soyuz T-5 docks at the front port.
17 MAY    Iskar-2 experimental amateur-radio satellite released from 
          Salyut-7's airlock.
23 MAY    Progress 13 launched.
25 MAY    Progress 13 docks at the rear port.
04 JUN    Progress 13 undocks.
06 JUN    Progress 13 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
24 JUN    Soyuz T-6 launched with Vladimir Dzhanibekov, Aleksandr    
          Ivanchenkev, and Jean-Loup Chretien (France) aboard.
25 JUN    Soyuz T-6 docks at rear port, despite computer problem.
02 JUL    Soyuz T-6 undocks and re-enters with Dzhanibekov, Ivanchenkev,
          and Chretien aboard.
10 JUL    Progress 14 launched.
12 JUL    Progress 14 docks at the rear port. 
30 JUL    Berezovoi and Lebedev make a 2 hour, 33 minute spacewalk to 
          retrieve samples from outside of Salyut-7.
11 AUG    Progress 14 undocks.
13 AUG    Progress 14 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
19 AUG    Soyuz T-7 launched with Leonid Popov, Aleksandr Serebrov, and
          Svetlana Savitskaya (second woman cosmonaut) aboard.
20 AUG    Soyuz T-7 docks at rear port.
27 AUG    Soyuz T-5 undocks and re-enters with Popov, Serebrov, and
          Savitskaya aboard.
29 AUG    Soyuz T-7 transfered to front port by Berezovoi and Lebedev.
18 SEP    Progress 15 launched.
20 SEP    Progress 15 docks at rear port.
14 OCT    Progress 15 undocks.
16 OCT    Progress 15 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
31 OCT    Progress 16 launched.
02 NOV    Progress 16 docks at rear port.
18 NOV    Iskra-3 experimental amateur-radio satellite released from 
          Salyut-7's airlock.
10 DEC    Soyuz T-7 undocks and re-enters with Berezovoi and Lebedev aboard.
          They have set a new, 211 day spaceflight duration record.
13 DEC    Progress 16 undocks.
14 DEC    Progress 16 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1983.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
02 MAR    Cosmos 1443 (prototype space-station module carrying cargo)
          launched by Proton rocket.
10 MAR    Cosmos 1443 docks at the front port.
20 APR    Soyuz T-8 launched with Vladimir Titov, Gennady Strekalov, and
          Aleksandr Serebrov aboard.
21 APR    Soyuz T-8 approaches Salyut-7 but fails to dock because of a 
          problem with its renezvous radar.
22 APR    Soyuz T-8 lands.
27 JUN    Soyuz T-9 launched with Vladimir Lyakhov and Aleksandr Aleksanderov
          aboard.
28 JUN    Soyuz T-9 docks at the rear port.
14 AUG    Cosmos 1443 undocks.
16 AUG    Lyakhov and Aleksanderov piolet Soyuz T-9 round to the front port.
17 AUG    Progress 17 launched.
19 AUG    Progress 17 docks at the rear port.
23 AUG    Cosmos 1443 sends a landing capsule (containing experimental 
          material) back to Earth.
17 SEP    Progress 17 undocks.
18 SEP    Progress 17 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
19 SEP    Cosmos 1443 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
27 SEP    Soyuz T-10A launch fails when the rocket explodes - Vladimir Titov
          and Gennady Strekalov use an escape system to pull themselves 
          clear of the pad.
20 OCT    Progress 18 launched.
22 OCT    Progress 18 docks at the rear port.
01 NOV    Lyakhov and Aleksanderov make a 2 hour, 50 minute spacewalk to add
          extra solar cells to one of Salyut-7's three solar panels.
03 NOV    Lyakhov and Alexanderov make a 2 hour, 55 minute spacewalk to 
          complete installation of the solar cells.
13 NOV    Progress 18 undocks.
16 NOV    Progress 18 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
23 NOV    Soyuz T-9 lands with Lyakhov and Aleksanderov aboard, after 150
          days in space.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1984.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
08 FEB    Soyuz T-10B launched with Leonid Kizim, Vladimir Solovyov and
          Oleg Atkov aboard.
09 FEB    Soyuz T-10 docks at the front port.
21 FEB    Progress 19 launched.
23 FEB    Progress 19 docks at the rear port.
31 MAR    Progress 19 undocks.
01 APR    Progress 19 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
03 APR    Soyuz T-11 launched with Yuri Malyshev, Gennady Strekalov and
          Rakesh Sharma (India) aboard.
04 APR    Soyuz T-11 docks at the rear port.
11 APR    Soyuz T-10B lands with Malyshev, Strekalov, and Sharma aboard.
13 APR    Kizim, Solovyev and atkov pilot Soyuz T-11 round to the front port.
15 APR    Progress 20 launched.
17 APR    Progress 20 docks at the rear port.
23 APR    Kizim and Solovyev make a 4 hour, 15 minute spacewalk to repair
          Salyut-7's rocket engines.
26 APR    Kizim and Solovyev make a 5 hour spacewalk to continue the engine
          repairs.
29 APR    Kizim and Solovyev make a 2 hour, 45 minute spacewalk to continue
          the engine repairs.
03 MAY    Kizim and Solovyev make a 2 hour, 45 minute spacewalk to complete
          the engine repairs.
06 MAY    Progress 20 undocks.
07 MAY    Progress 20 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
07 MAY    Progress 21 launched.
10 MAY    Progress 21 docks at rear port.
18 MAY    Kizim and Solovyev make a 3 hour, 5 minute spacewalk to add extra 
          cells to the second of Salyut-7's three solar panels.
26 MAY    Progress 21 undocks and is directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
28 MAY    Progress 22 launched.
30 MAY    Progress 22 docks at the rear port.
15 JUL    Progress 22 undocks and is directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
17 JUL    Soyuz T-12 launched with Vladimir Dzhanibekov, Svetlana Savitskaya,
          and Igor Volk aboard.
18 JUL    Soyuz T-12 docks at the rear port.
25 JUL    Dzhanibekov and Savitskaya (the first woman to do so) make a  
          3 hour, 35 minute spacewalk to perform a number of technical
          experiments.
29 JUL    Soyuz T-12 lands with Dzhanibekov, Savitskaya and Volk aboard.
08 AUG    Kizim and Solovyev make a 5 hour spacewalk to purform further
          repair work on Salyut-7's rocket engines.
14 AUG    Progress 23 launched.
16 AUG    Progress 23 docks at the rear port.
26 AUG    Progress 23 undocks.
28 AUG    Progress 23 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
02 OCT    Soyuz T-11 lands with Kizim, Solovyev and Atkov aboard - they have
          set a new space endurance record of 237 days.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1985.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
06 JUN    Soyuz T-13 launched with Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savinykh
          aboard.
08 JUN    Soyuz T-13 docks at the front port.
21 JUN    Progress 24 launched.
23 JUN    Progress 24 docks at the rear port.
15 JUL    Progress 24 undocks and is directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
19 JUL    Cosmos 1669 (a progress-type cargo ferry) launched.
21 JUL    Cosmos 1669 docks at the rear port.
02 AUG    Dzhanibekov and Savinkh make a 5 hour spacewalk to add extra solar
          cells to Salyut-7's third solar panel.
28 AUG    Cosmos 1669 undocks.
30 AUG    Cosmos 1669 directed into the atmosphere to burn up.
17 SEP    Soyuz T-14 launched with Vladimir Vasyutin, Georgi Grechko and
          Aleksandr Volkov aboard.
18 SEP    Soyuz T-14 docks at the rear port.
25 SEP    Soyuz T-13 undocks, carrying Dzhanibekov and Grechko.
26 SEP    After a day of independent flight, Soyuz T-13 lands.
27 SEP    Cosmos 1686 (a forerunner of the Kvant astrophysics module) launched
          by Proton rocket.
02 OCT    Cosmos 1686 docks at the front port.
21 NOV    Soyus T-14 lands with Vasyutin, Savinykh and Volkov aboard - the
          mission cut short by Vasyutin's illness.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1986.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
05 MAY    Soyuz T-15 leaves Mir space station with Leonid Kizim and Vladimir
          Solovyev aboard.
06 MAY    Soyuz T-15 docks at the front port.
28 MAY    Kizim and Solovyev make a 3 hour, 50 minute spacewalk to retrieve
          equipment from outside Salyut-7, and experimental space construction
          techniques.
31 MAY    Kizim and Solovyev make a 5 hour spacewalk to continue space
          construction experiments.
25 JUN    Soyuz T-15 undocks to carry Kizim and Solovyev back to Mir - the 
          end of the last planned expedition to the laboratory.
22 AUG    Salyut-7 reaches a 475km high, circular orbit, after a combination
          of firings by both its own and Cosmos 1686's engines. 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1991.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
07 FEB    Salyut-7 with Cosmos 1686 still attatched re-enters the atmosphere,
          burning up over Argentina.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    My final diary will be the Salyut-6 diary that I have compiled. 
It will be posted soon.    Bye for now   Tim. 
 
700.16Naviagtion Support for the Salyut 7 re-entryPORTIA::BIROFri Sep 11 1992 15:5926
    esa journal 92/2 has a very interesting article about
    the Naviagation Suppor tfor the Salyut-7/Kosmos 1686 Orbital Comples
    Near Re-entry...
    
    Page 209  by V. Lobachev et al.
    
    I found it interesting that
    " The majority of the Salyut-7 station's on-board equipment, sucha s
    the command and telemetry radio-links, temperature- control device,
    tracking data syste, orientation system, and some service systems, was
    operational at the moment of re-rentry into the Earth's atmosphere, 
    However, the possibilities for controlled de-orbiting were limited by
    the small amout of fuel in the station's tanks (about 70kg instead of
    the 400 kg necessary for a controlled re-entry).  Kosmos 1686 had
    stopped function in December 1989....
    "
    
    
    Thus I am assuming that the 19.954 beacon was from kosmos 1686 and
    the 166 MHz was the TLM from Salyut 7..  THis seem to fit as the
    19.954 was last heard of in the late 89 or early 90.  Does anyone
    have any more info on the actual last date?
    
    
    thanks john
    
700.17Cosmonaut missions to SALYUT 7VERGA::KLAESAll the Universe, or nothing!Mon Sep 28 1992 16:15341
Article: 2052
Newsgroups: sci.space.news
From: [email protected] (Voevodin S.A.)
Subject: VSA027: The "Salyut-7" Chart
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: AO ORBI (MS-DOS)
Date: Fri, 25 Sep 1992 18:08:34 GMT
 
        ***********************************************************
        *  VSA027       16.09.1992       (c) Sergey  A. Voevodin  *
        ***********************************************************
 
                          The Salyut-7 Chart
 
        1              2              3             4               5
 
    04.81                                        01.82          02.82
 
    Soyuz T-5      Soyuz T-5      Soyuz T-5      Soyuz T-5      Soyuz T-5
      /RE/           /RE/           /RE/           /RE/           /RE/
    Isaulov        Isaulov        Isaulov        Berezovoi      Berezovoi
    Lebedev        Lebedev        Lebedev        Lebedev        Lebedev
 
    Dzhanibekov    Dzhanibekov    Dzhanibekov    Dzhanibekov    Lyakhov
    Manarov        Manarov        Manarov        Manarov        Aleksandrov
 
    Lyakhov        Lyakhov        Lyakhov        Lyakhov        Malyshev
    Aleksandrov    Aleksandrov    Aleksandrov    Aleksandrov    Manarov
 
    Soyuz T-6      Soyuz T-6      Soyuz T-6      Soyuz T-6      Soyuz T-6
      /VE/           /VE/           /VE/           /VE/           /VE/
    Malyshev       Malyshev       Malyshev       Malyshev       Dzanibekov
    Ivanchenkov    Ivanchenkov    Ivanchenkov    Ivanchenkov    Ivanchenkov
    Chretien       Chretien       Chretien       Chretien       Chretien
 
    Kizim          Kizim          Kizim          Kizim          Kizim
    Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov
    Baudry         Baudry         Baudry         Baudry         Baudry
 
    Soyuz T-7      Soyuz T-7      Soyuz T-7      Soyuz T-7      Soyuz T-7
      /VE/           /VE/           /VE/           /VE/           /VE/
    Popov          Popov          Popov          Popov          Popov
    Serebrov       Serebrov       Serebrov       Serebrov       Serebrov
    Savitskaya     Savitskaya     Savitskaya     Savitskaya     Savitskaya
 
    Romanenko      Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Vasyutin
    Savinykh       Savinykh       Savinykh       Savinykh       Savinykh
    Kuleshova      Kuleshova      Pronina        Pronina        Pronina
 
    Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-8
      /EE/           /EE/           /EE/           /EE/           /EE/
    Titov          Titov          Titov          Titov          Titov
    Strekalov      Strekalov      Strekalov      Strekalov      Strekalov
    Kuleshova      Kuleshova      Pronina        Pronina        Pronina
 
    Viktorenko?    Viktorenko?    Viktorenko?    Viktorenko?    Viktorenko?
    Sevastiyanov?  Sevastiyanov?  Sevastiyanov?  Sevastiyanov?  Sevastiyanov?
    Pronina        Pronina        Savitskaya     Savitskaya     Savitskaya
 
    RE - a resident expedition
    VE - a visiting expedition
    EE - an extended expedition
 
  1 - In early 1981 trainings for 1982 expeditions began. Three crews were
      formed for the 1st RE. Two VEs - an international Soviet-French and
      another  with ( the second ) a woman were planed also for the year.
      Following those missions there was prepared an EE ( prolonged VE or
      shorted RE, Soyuz T-3 style ).
 
  2 - Romanenko fell ill with a "star fever" and was replaced by Vasyutin.
 
  3 - Kuleshova was removed from the crew owing to medical problems.
 
  4 - Isaulov had to retire from the cosmonaut team due to previous hepati-
      tis, and a badly rafting crew was launched for a long duration mission.
 
  5 - Dzhanibekov and Malyshev were swapped as Malyshev did not come to
      terms with Chretien.
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
       6               7             8              9             10
 
                   09.82          04.83          05.83          01.09.83
 
    Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-8      Soyuz T-9      Soyuz T-10
      /EE/           /EE/           /EE/           /RE/           /RE/
    Titov          Titov          Titov          Lyakhov        Titov
    Strekalov      Strekalov      Strekalov      Aleksandrov    Strekalov
    Pronina        Pronina        Serebrov
                                                 Titov          Kizim
    Viktorenko?    Lyakhov        Lyakhov        Strekalov      Soloviyov
    Sevastiyanov?  Aleksandrov    Aleksandrov
    Savitskaya     Serebrov       Savinykh       Malyshev       Vasyutin
                                                 Manarov        Savinykh
    Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Vasyutin
    Savinykh       Savinykh       Savinykh       Vasyutin       Viktorenko
                                                 Savinykh       Sevastiyanov
    Soyuz T-9      Soyuz T-9
      /RE/           /RE/         Soyuz T-9      Soyuz T-10     Soyuz T-11
    Lyakhov        Lyakhov          /RE/           /RE/           /RE/
    Aleksandrov    Aleksandrov    Lyakhov        Titov          Kizim
                                  Aleksandrov    Strekalov      Soloviyov
    Malyshev       Malyshev                                     Volk
    Manarov        Manarov        Malyshev       Malyshev
                                  Manarov        Manarov        Vasyutin
    Kizim          Kizim                                        Savinykh
    Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Kizim          Kizim          Levchenko
                                  Soloviyov      Soloviyov
    Soyuz T-10     Soyuz T-10                                   Viktorenko
      /RE/           /RE/         Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Sevastiyanov
    Malyshev       Malyshev       Savinykh       Savinykh       Stankyavichus
    Manarov        Manarov
    Volk           Volk           Soyuz T-10     Soyuz T-11     Soyuz T-12
                                    /RE/           /RE/           /VE/
    Kizim          Kizim          Malyshev       Malyshev       Malyshev
    Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Manarov        Manarov        Rukavishnikov
    Levchenko      Levchenko      Volk           Volk           Sharma
 
    Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Kizim          Kizim          Berezovoi
    Savinykh       Savinykh       Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Grechko
    Stankyavichus  Stankyavichu   Levchenko      Levchenko      Malhotra
 
    Soyuz T-11     Soyuz T-11     Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Soyuz T-13
      /VE/           /VE/         Savinykh       Savinykh         /VE/
    Viktorenko     Viktorenko     Stankayvichus  Stankyavichus  Romanenko
    Sevastiyanov   Sevastiyanov                                 Laveikin
    Polyakov       Polyakov       Soyuz T-11     Soyuz T-12     Polyakov
                                    /VE/           /VE/
    Romanenko      Romanenko      Viktorenko     Viktorenko     Dzhanibekov
    Laveikin       Laveikin       Savastiaynov   Sevastiyanov   Manarov
    Potapov        Potapov        Polyakov       Polyakov       Potapov
 
                                  Romanenko      Romanenko      Soyuz T/Pion
                                  Laveikin       Laveikin         /RE/
                                  Potapov        Potapov        Romanenko
                                                                Popov
                                                 Soyuz T/Pion   Titov
                                                   /RE/         Soloviyov
                                                 Romanenko
                                                 Popov          Kolesnikov
                                                 Kizim          Lisun
                                                 Soloviyov      Khludeev
                                                                Glazkov
                                                 Kolesnikov     Rozhdestvensky
                                                 Lisun          Stepanov
                                                 Khludeyev      Illarionov
                                                 Glazkov
                                                 Rozhdestvensky
                                                 Stepanov
                                                 Illarionov
 
  6 - The first stage in Salyut-7's life was over and for 1983 three flights
      were planed:

          1. The EE ( 3 months ) for working with Kosmos-1443, was also going 
             to be the first long duration mission for a woman.
          2. The second RE.
          3. The third RE was scheduled to be launched in the end of the
             year and the first Buran pilot should have felt space, it was
             going to be the first swap crew mission. Some time later the
             next VE should have brought a doctor for the RE.
 
  7 - Savitskaya refused to be in the back-up crew and her crew was shifted
      from hot positions.
 
  8 - Savitskaya made a leave and did everything to block the way into spa-
      ce for Pronina too, whom Serebrov replaced in the prime crew.
 
  9 - After Soyuz T-8 failure the flights' plan was changed a little. New
      Pion militay group was formed for a future military Kosmos module
      flight.
 
 10 - Crews for the Soviet-Indian mission were formed and other crews under-
      went changes too.
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
      11             12              13             14             15
 
    10.83           11.83          12.83          02.84          04.84
                                                                 Soyuz T-13
    Soyuz T-10      Soyuz T-10     Soyuz T-10     Soyuz T-10       /EE/
      /RE/            /RE/           /RE/           /RE/         Savitskaya
    Kizim           Kizim          Kizim          Kizim          Ivanova
    Soloviyov       Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Dobrokvashina
    Volk            Atkov          Atkov          Atkov
                                                                 Viktorenko
    Vasyutin        Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Aleksandrov
    Savinykh        Savinykh       Savinykh       Savinykh       Rukavishnikov?
    Levchenko       Polyakov       Polyakov       Polyakov
                                                                 Soyuz T-14
    Viktorenko      Viktorenko     Viktorenko     Viktorenko       /RE/
    Sevastiyanov    Sevastiyanov   Sevastiyanov   Sevastiyanov   Vasyutin
    Stankyavichus   Potapov        Potapov        Potapov        Savinykh
 
    Soloviyov       Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Viktorenko
    Serebrov        Serebrov       Serebrov       Serebrov       Aleksandrov
 
    Soyuz T-11      Soyuz T-11     Soyuz T-11     Soyuz T-11     Soloviyov
      /VE/            /VE/           /VE/           /VE/         Serebrov
    Malyshev        Malyshev       Malyshev       Malyshev
    Rukavishnikov   Rukavishnikov  Rukavishnikov  Strekalov      Titov
    Sharma          Sharma         Sharma         Sharma         Manarov
 
    Berezovoi       Berezovoi      Berezovoi      Berezovoi      Soyuz T-15
    Grechko         Grechko        Grechko        Grechko          /VE/
    Malhotra        Malhotra       Malhotra       Malkhotra      Berezovoi?
                                                                 Grechko?
    Soyuz T-12      Soyuz T-12     Soyuz T-12     Soyuz T-12     Levchenko
      /VE/            /VE/           /VE/           /VE/
    Romanenko       Romanenko      Dzhanibekov    Dzhanibekov    Lyakhov?
    Laveikin        Laveikin       Savitskaya     Savitskaya     Rukavishnikov?
    Polyakov        Volk           Volk           Volk           Stankyavichus
 
    Dzhanibekov     Dzhanobekov    Vasyutin       Vasyutin       Soyuz T-16
    Manarov         Manarov        Savinykh       Savinykh         /RE/
    Potapov         Levchenko      Ivanova        Ivanova        Romanenko
                                                                 Laveikin?
    Soyuz T/Pion    Stankyavichus  Levchenko      Levchenko      Kolesnikov
      /RE/
    Romanenko       Soyuz T/Pion   Soyuz T/Pion   Soyuz T/Pion   Popov
    Popov             /RE/           /RE/           /RE/            ?
    Titov           Romanenko      Romanenko      Romanenko      Lisun
    Soloviyov       Popov          Popov          Popov
                    Titov          Titov          Titov          Titov
    Kolesnikov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Soloviyov      Manarov?
    Lisun                                                        Khludeev
    Khludeev        Kolesnokov     Kolesnikov     Kolesnikov
    Glazkov         Lisun          Lisun          Lisun
    Rozhdestvensky  Khludeev       Khludeev       Khludeev
    Stepanov        Glazkov        Glazkov        Glazkov
    Illarionov      Rozhdestvensky Rozhdestvensky Rozhdestvensky
                    Stepanov       Stepanov       Stepanov
                    Illarionov     Illarionov     Illarionov
 
  11 - The September Soyuz T launch abort broke the plans again. Lyakhov/
       Aleksandrov flight was prolonged and the Soyuz T-10 start was still
       expected. But the schedule was not fulfilled due to Salyut-7 engine
       problems.
 
  12 - The plan for 1984 was changed: one RE ( and a doctor was to fly the
       entire period of mission ) and two VEs - a Soviet-Indian and another
       with Buran tester ).  There was no swap crew mission planed.
 
  13 - NASA announced about the first female EVA, and the Soviets changed
       their plans, a special mission was invented.
 
  14 - Rukavishnikov got the flue and was replaced by Strekalov.
 
  15 - Glushko wanted more "firsts" and formed the first all-women crew,
       it was to be an EE. And the original missions for 1985 were:

       1. The female EE during The International Women's Day;
       2. The 4th RE;
       3. A Buran pilot VE;
       4. The last ( 5th ) RE - Pion.
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
      16             17             18             19
 
    11.84          02.85          03.85          12.85
    Soyuz T-13     Soyuz T-13     Soyuz T-13     Soyuz T-15
      /EE/                          /RE/           /RE/
    Savitskaya     Savitskaya     Dzhanibekov    Viktorenko
    Ivanova        Ivanova        Savinykh       Aleksandrov
    Dobrokvashina  Dobrokvashina                 Salei
                                  Popov
    Viktorenko     Viktorenko     Aleksandrov    Soloviyov
    Aleksandrov    Aleksandrov                   Serebrov
    Rukavishnikov? Soloviyov      Malyshev       Moskalenko
 
    Soyuz T-14     Soyuz T-14     Berezovoi      Titov
      /RE/           /RE/                        Manarov
    Vasyutin       Dzhanibekov    Romanenko
    Savinykh       Savinykh                      Romanenko
    Volkov                        Soyuz T-14     Laveikin
                   Popov            /RE/
    Viktorenko     Aleksandrov    Vasyutin
    Aleksandrov                   Grechko
    Salei          Malyshev       Volkov
 
    Soloviyov      Berezovoi      Viktorenko
    Serebrov                      Strekalov
    Moskalenko     Romanenko      Salei
 
    Titov          Soyuz T-15     Soloviyov
    Manarov          /RE/         Serebrov
                   Vasyutin       Moskalenko
    Soyuz T-15     Grechko
      /VE/         Volkov         Titov
    Berezovoi?                    Manarov
    Grechko?       Viktorenko
    Levchenko      Strekalov      Soyuz T-15
                   Salei            /VE/
    Lyakhov?                      Savitskaya
    Rukavishnikov? Soloviyov      Ivanova
    Stankyavichus  Serebrov       Dobrokvashina
                   Moskalenko
                                  Viktorenko
                                  Aleksandrov
                                  Soloviyov
 
                                  Soyuz T-16
                                    /VE/
                                  Berezovoi?
                                  Soloviyov?
                                  Levchenko
 
                                  Lyakhov?
                                  Rukavishnikov?
                                  Stankyavichus
 
  16 - The military Pion mission was scattered and the next crew in turn
       was to carry out the Pion's programm.
 
  17 - The Salyut-7 died and the original plan crushed but Glushko didn't
       want to lose the all-women crew idea and made up his mind to launch
       free-flying Soyuz spaceship with the crew. The most experienced cos-
       monauts were selected for Salyut-7 repair, other missions were post-
       poned.
 
  18 - The free-flying female Soyuz mission was replaced by a female VE to
       Mir.
 
  19 - The last Salyut-7 RE was to complete the program of the previous
       flight that was ceased due to Vasyutin's prostate disease. However
       the mission was never carried out. But it is another story...
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sergey A. Voevodin
 
8 Okruzhnoy proezd 11-2
156014 Kostroma
Russia
 
tel.(fax) +7 0942 552853
 
e-mail (internet): [email protected]