- Soyuz 25
Infobox Space mission
mission_name = Soyuz 25
sign = Photon
crew_members = 2
launch =October 9 ,1977
02:40:35 UTCGagarin's Start
landing =October 11 ,1977
03:25:20 UTC
185 km NW of Tselinograd
duration = 2d/00:44:45
orbits = 32
next =Soyuz 26
previous =Soyuz 24 |Crew
Number in parentheses indicates number of spaceflights by each individual prior to and including this mission.
*Vladimir Kovalyonok (1) - Commander
*Valery Ryumin (1) - Flight EngineerBackup crew
*
Yuri Romanenko - Commander
*Aleksandr Ivanchenkov - Flight EngineerMission parameters
*Mass: 6860 kg
*Perigee: 198.5 km
*Apogee: 258.1 km
*Inclination: 51.66°
*Period: 88.66 minutesSoyuz 25 was a Soviet
human spaceflight launchedOctober 9 ,1977 . It was meant to be the first mission to theSalyut 6 space station but failed after a problem with the docking system.On board wereVladimir Kovalyonok andValery Ryumin . Their callsign for the mission was "Foton" (Photon).All went well right up until docking. But for some reason the spacecraft would not hard dock. As the news release stated:
*"At 07.09Moscow time today (10 October , 1977) the automatic rendezvous of the Soyuz 25 ship and the Salyut 6 station was begun(sic). From a distance of 120 metres, the vehicles performed a docking manoeuvre. Due to deviations from the planned procedure for docking, the link-up was called off. The crew has begun making preparations for a return to Earth."The hard docking was needed for the enabling of electrical connections. The spacecraft then retracted itself and formed a tight seal. The problem was traced later to a faulty mechanism on the Soyuz but this was not discovered until after the
Soyuz 26 flight, who performed an EVA to inspect the second docking port on Salyut 6.Because the crew were flying the Soyuz 7K-T spacecraft there was only battery power available for a short two day mission. The crew were forced to re-enter and landed 185 km northwest ofTselinograd ,Kazakhstan .This failure resulted in a rule stating that crews had to have at least one crew member who had flown before. This resulted in the all-rookie backup crew of
Aleksandr Ivanchenkov andYuri Romanenko being paired with veteran cosmonauts for later missions.
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