- Vladimir Chelomei
Vladimir Nikolayevich Chelomei (Влади́мир Никола́евич Челоме́й) (
June 30 1914 —December 8 1984 ) was a Sovietmechanics scientist androcket engineer .Early life
Chelomei was born in
Siedlce ,Imperial Russia (nowPoland ). At the age of three months, his family fled toPoltava , whenWorld War I came close to Siedlce.When Chelomei was 12 years old, the family moved again to
Kiev .In 1932 Chelomei was admitted to the
Kiev Polytechnic Institute (later the basis of Kiev Aviation Institute), where he showed himself as a student with outstanding talent. In 1936 his first book "Vector Analysis" was published. Studying at the institute, Chelomei also attended lectures onmathematical analysis , theory ofdifferential equations ,mathematical physics ,theory of elasticity andmechanics in theKiev University . He also attended lectures byTullio Levi-Civita in theUkrainian SSR Academy of Sciences. Namely in this time Chelomei became interested inmechanics and in the theory ofoscillations and remained interested the rest of his life. In 1937 Chelomei graduated from the institute with honors. After that he worked there as a lecturer, defending a dissertation for theCandidate of Science (in 1939).World War II
From the beginning of the "
Great Patriotic War ", Chelomei worked at the "Baranov Central Institute of Aviation Motor Building" (TsIAM) inMoscow , where he created the first Soviet pulsating air jet engine in 1942, independently of similar contemporary developments inNazi Germany .In summer 1944 it became known that
Nazi Germany usedV-1 cruise missiles against SouthernEngland . OnOctober 19 1944 , following a decision by theUSSR State Defense Committee andPeople's Commissar for Aviation Industry Aleksei Ivanovich Shakhurin, Chelomei was appointed the Director and Chief Constructor of "Plant N51" (its previous directorNikolai Nikolaevich Polikarpov having died a short time before). Chelomei was to design, build, and test the first Sovietcruise missile at the earliest possible date. As early as December 1944, the missile, code-named "10X", was test fired fromPetlyakov Pe-8 andTupolev Tu-2 aircraft.OKB-52 and academic career
Following his success with the 10X, the
USSR Special Design Bureau on designing pilot-less aircraft (OKB-52) was established under Chelomei's leadership. In 1955 Chelomei was appointed the Chief Constructor of theOKB-52 , where he continued to work on cruise missiles.Chelomei continued his scientific research, earning a doctorate in science from
Bauman Moscow Higher Technical School . After his dissertation defense in 1951, he became a professor at the School in 1952.In 1958, OKB-52 put forward a proposal for a multi-stage
Intercontinental ballistic missile . Although theirUR-200 rocket design was rejected in favour ofMikhail Yangel 's "R-36" (NATO designation "SS-9 Scarp"), theirUR-100 design was accepted.Chelomei's OKB was part of the General Machine-Building Ministry headed by
Sergey Afanasiev .pacecraft
In 1959 Chelomei was appointed the "Chief Constructor of Aviation Equipment".
OKB-52, along with designing ICBMs, started to work on spacecraft, and in 1961 began work on a design for a much more powerful ICBM, the UR-500.
In 1962, Chelomei was created an Academician of the
USSR Academy of Sciences , Mechanics Department.Chelomei became Korolev's internal competitor in the "Moon race". Chelomei proposed that the powerful UR-500 be used to launch a small two-man craft on a lunar flyby, and managed to gain support for his proposal by employing members of Khruschev's family. He also claimed the UR-500 could be used to launch a military space station.
Following Khruschev's removal, Chelomei's and Korolev's projects were combined, but the Soviet Lunar program continued. The first launch of the UR-500 (also known as "Proton") took place on
March 10 1967 .Although it was never used to send cosmonauts to the Moon as Chelomei had hoped, Proton was widely used to launch Soviet satellites, and the
Salyut andMir space stations, in the following three decades.The Earth satellites such as
Polyot were also designed by Chelomei's OKB. Unlike earlier such craft, even Chelomei's first satellites "Polyot-1" (1963) and "Polyot-2" (1964) were able to change their orbits themselves. He also headed the development of theProton satellite . In 1970s Chelomei's OKB worked on the "Almaz " complex, which became the basis for orbital stationsSalyut 2 ,Salyut 3 , andSalyut 5 designed by Chelomei and his OKB. Chelomei designed a manned orbiting vehicle, the TKS, to support Almaz as an alternative to Soyuz. The TKS never flew as planned but derivatives flew as modules onSalyut 7 and Mir.Chelomei died in
Moscow in 1984.Awards
*two times
Hero of Socialist Labor (1959, 1963)
*USSR State Prize (1967, 1974, 1982)
*Lenin Prize (1959)
*four Orders of Lenin
*Order of the October Revolution External links
*ru icon [http://www.reutov.net/reut-news/arhivrazd.php?razd=1&day=28&month=6&year=2004 Biography]
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