Table of Contents
For Students
Read Next
Discover
By 1969, even though the U.S.S.R. was still moving forward with its lunar landing program, it had begun to shift its emphasis in human spaceflight to the development of Earth-orbiting stations in which cosmonaut crews could carry out extended observations and experiments on missions that lasted weeks or months rather than a few days. The first Soviet space station, called Salyut 1, was launched April 19, 1971. The first crew to occupy the station—Georgy Dobrovolsky, Viktor Patsayev, and Vladislav Volkov—spent 23 days aboard carrying out scientific studies but perished when their Soyuz spacecraft depressurized during reentry. With similar objectives for ...(100 of 22189 words)