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Soyuz TM-19
1994 Russian crewed spaceflight to Mir From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Soyuz TM-19 was a crewed Soyuz spaceflight to space station Mir that carried Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko and Kazakh cosmonaut Talgat Musabayev, while also landing German astronaut Ulf Merbold. It launched on 1 July 1994, at 12:24:50 UTC.[3]
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Crew
Mission highlights
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Commander Malenchenko and Flight Engineer Musabayev, both spaceflight rookies, were to have been launched with veteran cosmonaut Gennadi Strekalov, who would have returned to Earth with Viktor Afanasyev and Yuri Usachov in Soyuz TM-18 after a few days on Mir. However, the cancellation of one of two Progress-M cargo ships scheduled to resupply Mir during the Agat crew's stay meant that Strekalov's couch had to carry supplies. The result was the first all-rookie Soyuz flight since Soyuz 25 in October 1977. Docking occurred without incident on July 3. Both cosmonauts and Doctor Valeri Polyakov (who had arrived on Soyuz TM-18) became the 16th resident crew; many technical problems with the station arose during this expedition, necessitating a previously untried manual supply docking by Malenchenko. On November 3, Malenchenko, Musabayev and Merbold undocked in Soyuz TM-19 and backed 190m from Mir. They then activated the Kurs automatic approach system, which successfully redocked the spacecraft. The cosmonauts then transferred back to Mir. The test was related to the difficulties Soyuz TM-20 and Progress M-24 experienced during their automatic approaches. Final undocking and reentry occurred the following day without incident.
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Mission accomplishments
- Docked with Mir
- Partial crew exchange
- Conducted medical experiments
- Conducted materials experiments
- Malenchenko and Musabayev perform EVA on 09.09.1994 (5h 6m) to repair station's external insulation
- Both cosmonauts repeat EVA on 14.09.1994 (6h 1m) for same purpose
- First successful manual docking of a Progress supply ship
Spacecraft location
In 2010, the Energia corporation gave the Soyuz TM-19 landing capsule to the Techink Museum Speyer in Speyer, Germany, where it is exhibited as a permanent public display ever since.[4]
References
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