Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Soyuz 11
Episode Date: July 27, 2023Having lost the race to the Moon, the Soviet space program decided to go in a different direction. If they couldn’t be first on the moon, then they could take the lead in the area of endurance in sp...ace and the development of space stations. In 1971 they launched the world’s first space station, and the crew of three cosmonauts who inhabited the station set the record for the longest time in space. Their accomplishments in space, however, were overshadowed by what happened on their return to Earth. Learn more about Soyuz 11 and the only humans to have ever died in space on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Expedition Unknown Find out the truth behind popular, bizarre legends. Expedition Unknown, a podcast from Discovery, chronicles the adventures of Josh Gates as he investigates unsolved iconic stories across the globe. With direct audio from the hit TV show, you’ll hear Gates explore stories like the disappearance of Amelia Earhart in the South Pacific and the location of Captain Morgan's treasure in Panama. These authentic, roughshod journeys help Gates separate fact from fiction and learn the truth behind these compelling stories. InsideTracker provides a personal health analysis and data-driven wellness guide to help you add years to your life—and life to your years. Choose a plan that best fits your needs to get your comprehensive biomarker analysis, customized Action Plan, and customer-exclusive healthspan resources. For a limited time, Everything Everywhere Daily listeners can get 20% off InsideTracker’s new Ultimate Plan. Visit InsideTracker.com/eed. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Listen on Podurama: https://podurama.com Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Having lost the race to the moon, the Soviet space program decided to go in a different direction.
If they couldn't be first on the moon, then they could lead the area of endurance in space
and the development of space stations. In 1971, they launched the world's first space station,
and the crew of three cosmonauts who inhabited the station set the record for the longest time in space.
Their accomplishments in space, however, were overshadowed by what happened on their return to the Earth.
Learn more about Soyuz 11 and the only humans to have ever died in space on this episode of
everything everywhere daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast
that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day and tonight. And how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us
every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. It's common to think that the space race between
the United States and the Soviet Union ended the moment Neil Armstrong said,
at foot on the moon. That at least is the American perspective. According to that view, after starting
from behind in the early 1960s, the United States leaped ahead in the space race and crossed the finish
line before the Soviets. There's an element of truth to that, but it isn't the whole truth. In reality,
the Soviets never really made a serious attempt at landing a human on the moon. The race to the moon was
really more a race that the Americans had with themselves. The Soviets, knowing that they couldn't
beat the Americans to the moon, shifted their attention to try to dominate Earth's orbit.
They were going to build the first space station, where cosmonauts could stay for extended
periods of time with the goal of establishing a permanent presence in space.
On April 19, 1971, while the United States was still in the middle of the Apollo program,
the Soviets launched Salute I, the world's first space station.
Salute I was intended to be a proof of concept.
It was to fly in space and be a home for cosmonauts for a few weeks before returning to Earth.
It was approximately 20 meters long and 4 meters in diameter.
The Soviets didn't have a great deal of experience with orbital rendezvouses and docking.
Vostock 3 and 4 in 1962 and Vostock's 5 and 6 in 1963 both attempted to rendezvous in space,
but they only got within a few kilometers of each other.
Soyuz 3 attempted to dock with the uncrewed Soyuz 2 in October of 1968.
Soyuz 3 came within a meter of their target, but eventually had to abandon the attempt due to a lack of fuel
to continue orbital maneuvers.
This is relevant because three days after Salute 1 was launched, the first crew flew up to the
space station.
Soyuz 10 was to be the first crew on Salute 1.
They managed to rendezvous and soft dock with the space station, but due to a technical
malfunction, they were unable to hard dock, which would allow them to transfer spacecraft.
With the docking unsuccessful, Soyuz 10 immediately returned to Earth.
The failure of Soyuz 10 was an embarrassment.
In their next attempt, they were sending up a more experienced crew in front.
Soyuz 11, led by Alexei Leonov, the world's first spacewalker. However, just three days before
launch, during a routine physical, one of the crew members, Valerie Kubasov was found to have a lump
in their lung. Fearing tuberculosis, the entire crew was scrubbed, and the mission was given to the
backup crew. It later turned out that the lump was nothing more than a pollen allergy.
Soyuz 11 was launched on June 7, 1971. The former backup crew and now main crew consisted of three
cosmonauts. Commander Gregory Dorbervalsky, research engineer Vladislav Volkov, and flight engineer
Viktor Petzayev. This time, the rendezvous in docking was a success. The technical problems had been
solved, and Soyuz 11 became the first successful docking with a space station in history. The docking
process was time-consuming, as this had never been done before. It took over three hours. They had to
check to make sure that all the seals were tight between the capsule and the station. They had to
make sure of the electrical and hydraulic connections were all working. Most importantly,
they had to make sure the pressure in both spacecraft was the same before they could open the door.
The mission aboard Salute 1 consisted of a lot of maintenance and testing, as this was the first
space station to have ever flown. They had to test all of the systems on board the space
station to make sure that everything worked. They had to check the navigation and control systems
of the space station to change its orbit and conduct maneuvers. One of the objectives of the mission
was to establish the record for time spent in space. So they did have a quick,
quite a bit of time on their hands. They conducted scientific observations of the Earth's surface,
studying geology, snow, and ice cover, as well as observations of the atmosphere. Perhaps most importantly,
they were able to conduct studies on themselves, as they now had spent more time in space than any
other human beings. They worked out on the first treadmill in space. They grew Chinese cabbage and
onions, the first plants grown in space, and they operated the first astronomical telescope in space.
They also did daily television programs for Soviet citizens from space, something that Soviet
journalists dubbed Cosmovision. After 23 days in space and 362 orbits around the Earth,
the decision was made to bring the crew home a bit early. Mechanical problems were developing
on board the space station, and there had been a small electrical fire. Before leaving,
they put the space station into a higher orbit to prevent any orbital decay that might occur
until the next crew arrived. On June 29, 1971, the crew left Salute 1 and entered the
Soyuz 11 capsule and started the process to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere. With them,
some scientific samples, tapes, and other gear used during their mission.
As they were about to leave, there was a warning light in their capsule,
indicating that the hatch on their capsule hadn't been sealed properly.
The team on the ground took them through a procedure to clear any possible objects,
which prevented the hatch from sealing, but the warning light remained on.
Despite the warning light, ground control determined that the hatch was in fact sealed,
and they were given the order to separate from Salute 1.
As they pulled away, they circled the space station and took photos of what had been their home
for the last 23 days. After three orbits, Commodore Dobryvalsky fired the retro rockets to slow their
speed for re-entry, and nine minutes later, they fired the explosive bolts to separate the descent capsule
from the rest of the spacecraft. As far as everyone on the ground was concerned, the return went according
to plan. The capsule re-entered the atmosphere, the parachutes deployed, and they landed not far from
their target in what is today central Kazakhstan. Mission control was worried when they didn't hear any voice
communications from the crew when they re-entered the atmosphere, but those were relieved when they
saw the parachutes open. When the recovery team reached the capsule, they knocked on the hatch,
which was assigned to let the cosmonauts know that they had arrived. The cosmonauts were to knock
back as an all's well signal. However, the recovery team didn't hear a reply. When they opened the hatch
of the capsule, the recovery team was horrified at what they saw. All three cosmonauts were dead.
All of them had dark blue blotches on their face and had
had blood streaming from their noses and ears.
This had been the second Soviet space flight to end in disaster
following the death of Vladimir Kolmarov and Soyuz 1 in 1967,
on which I've done a previous episode.
The deaths of the cosmonauts was a shock to everyone in the Soviet Union,
and they had just been watching them on television for the last several weeks.
The men were posthumously granted the hero of Soviet Union medal
and their bodies lay in state for several days as thousands of mourners paid their respects.
After a full state funeral, their ashes were in turn.
heard in the wall of the Kremlin. The American sent an astronaut Thomas Stafford as their representative
to the funeral, where he was hosted by the cosmonaut Alexei Leonov. The friendship the two men struck
culminated in the Apollo Soyuz mission in 1975, where the two men met and shook hands in space.
One month after the funeral, Dave Scott and Jim Irwin of Apollo 15 placed a plaque and small
statue on the moon to commemorate all fallen astronauts and cosmonauts, including the crew of Soyuz 11.
While the deaths of the three cosmonauts was widely known throughout the Soviet Union,
what was kept secret from the Soviet people for years was what caused their death.
The three men had obviously died of asphyxiation.
An investigation into their deaths soon discovered the problem.
When the descent capsule separated from the rest of the craft just before re-entry,
a faulty valve sprang open.
The valve was only supposed to open to allow air to enter the capsule when it had reached an altitude of four kilometers.
When it accidentally opened, the capsule was still in the vacuum of space, and air inside the capsule escaped.
The position of the men inside the capsule indicated that they recognized the problem and attempted to close the valve.
However, the process of manually closing the valve took several minutes.
The heart monitor data showed that all three astronauts were dead in under two minutes after the loss of pressure,
and for much of that time, they would have been unable to function.
Prior to the mission, the original commander Alexei Leonov told the crew to manually close the valve
between the orbital and descent modules because he didn't trust them.
None of the cosmonauts did the manual valve closures as suggested.
But perhaps most importantly, none of the cosmonauts were wearing pressurized spacesuits,
which would have protected them from such an event.
The tragedy of Soyuz 11 resulted in many changes to the Soviet space program.
The Soyuz spacecraft was redesigned to improve valves and allowed them to be
quickly shut manually if necessary.
Future Soyuz flights were also changed from three cosmonauts to two.
The extra space in the cabin allowed for each cosmonaut to wear a pressure suit during
launch and re-entry.
Soyuz spacecraft are still being used today, and since Soyuz 11, there hasn't been a single
fatality.
As for a salute one, the world's first space station, no other crews were ever sent to it.
And in October of 1971, it was deorbited over the Pacific Ocean after only 175 days.
days in orbit. The legacy of Soyuz 11 is very bittersweet. It was a record-setting mission. The
cosmonauts were the first ever to live on a space station, and they broke the record for the
longest time in orbit. The things that they did in orbit were the first time many of them had ever
been done before. In the end, however, Soyuz 11 has gone down in history as one of the greatest
tragedies in the history of spaceflight. As all three cosmonauts died above the Carmen
line, while still in orbit, they remain the first.
and so far only human beings to have ever died in space.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
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