Pavel Romanovich Popovich | |
---|---|
Cosmonaut | |
Nationality | Soviet |
Born | October 5, 1930 Uzyn, Kiev Oblast, Soviet Union (now Ukraine) |
Died | Gurzuf, Crimea, Ukraine |
Other occupation | Pilot |
Rank | Major General, Soviet Air Force |
Time in space | 2d 22h 57m (Vostok 4) 15d 17h 30m (Soyuz 14) 18d 16h 27m (total) |
Selection | Air Force Group 1 |
Missions | Vostok 4, Soyuz 14 |
Mission insignia | |
Retirement | 26 January 1982 |
Pavel Romanovich Popovich (Russian: Па́вел Рома́нович Попо́вич, Ukrainian: Павло Романович Попович, Pavlo Romanovych Popovych) (October 5, 1930 – September 29, 2009[1][2]) was a Soviet cosmonaut.[3]
He was the 4th Cosmonaut in space, the 6th person in orbit, and the 8th person in space.[3]
Contents |
Pavel Romanovich Popovich | |||||||||
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He was born in Uzyn, Kiev Oblast of Soviet Union (now Ukraine).[1][4] to Roman Porfirievich Popovich (a fireman in a sugar factory) and Theodosia Kasyanovna Semyonov.[4][5][6] He had two sisters (one older, one younger) and two brothers (both younger).[4]
During World War II, the Germans occupied Uzyn, and burned documents including Popovich's birth certificate. After the war, these were restored through witness testimony, and although his mother knew that he was born in 1929, two witnesses insisted that Popovich was born in 1930, and so this became his official year of birth.[6]
In 1947, he left vocational school in Bila Tserkva with qualifications as a carpenter.[4] In 1951, Popovich graduated as a construction engineer from a technical school in Magnitogorsk,[4] as well as receiving a pilot's degree.[1]
In 1954, he joined the Young Communist League.
He was married to Marina Popovich, a retired Soviet Air Force colonel, engineer, and legendary Soviet test pilot who has been outspoken about UFO reality. They had two daughters. They later divorced, and Popovich married Alevtina Oshegova.[3][4]
Popovich was also a keen weight lifter:
He was also a member of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic 6th-11th convocations.[2]
After his retirement in 1993, he lived in Moscow[5]
Popovich died in a hospital in Gurzuf where he had been taken following a stroke on 29 September 2009. Brain hemorrhage was cited as the cause of death.[1][2][8] He is buried in Moscow.[5]
In 1952 he graduated from a course at the Stalingrad Military Aviation School near Novosibirsk. He then went on to train at the Military Officers of the Air Force Aviation Training School in Grozny, until 1954[4] when he joined the Soviet Air Force.[1]
Details are from Space Encyclopedia ASTROnote, unless otherwise noted[4]
Date | Role | Location |
---|---|---|
25 Dec 1954 | Pilot | 265 Fighter Regiment (IAP) |
336th Fighter Aviation Division (IAD) (later the IAD 64-Fighter Air Corps (IAC) 22nd Air Army) | ||
19 Jun 1957 | Senior Pilot/Squadron Adjutant | |
27 Feb 1958 | Senior Airman | 772-IAP IAS 22nd 26th VA. |
31 May 1958 | 234-Guards Regiment Proskurov 9th IN IAD Moscow (Kubinka) | |
31 Jan 1959 | Adjutant of the squadron | |
Jan 1982 | Deputy Chief | Yuri Gagarin Cosmonauts Training Center |
29 Dec 1989 | Secondment | State Committee of the USSR Agro |
20 Aug 1993 | Retired by order of the Defense Ministry |
Aircraft types flown:
Details are from Space Encyclopedia ASTROnote, unless otherwise noted[4]
Date | Cyrillic | English |
---|---|---|
12 May 1959 | Военный летчик 3-го класса | Military Pilot, 3rd class |
15 Aug 1962 | Военный летчик 1-го класса | Military Pilot, 1st class |
10 Nov 1960 | Инструктор парашютно-десантной подготовки (ПДП) ВВС | Parachute Instructor (PDP) Air Force |
30 Nov 1962 | Космонавт 3-го класса | Astronaut 3rd class |
24 Jul 1974 | Космонавт 2-го класса | Astronaut 2nd Class |
Details are from Space Encyclopedia ASTROnote, unless otherwise noted[4]
Date | Insignia | Cyrillic | English |
---|---|---|---|
30 Oct 1954 | Лейтенант | Lieutenant | |
24 Apr 1957 | Старший лейтенант | Senior Lieutenant | |
30 Mar 1959 | Капитан | Captain | |
05 Nov 1961 | Майор | Major | |
11 Aug 1962 | Подполковник (Podpolkovnik) | Lieutenant Colonel | |
30 Apr 1965 | Полковник (Polkovnik) | Colonel | |
5 May 1976 | Генерал-майор авиации | Major-General (Aviation) | |
20 Aug 1993 | Retired from the Air Force |
In 1960, he was selected as one of the first group of twenty air force pilots that would train as the first cosmonauts for the Soviet space program.[1] The training took place between March 1960 and January 1961, and Popovich passed his final exams in Cosmonaut Basic Training on 17/18 January 1961.[4] He was appointed as an astronaut on 25 January 1961.[4]
He was considered as a strong candidate for the first spaceflight - but while Yuri Gagarin was ultimately chosen for the Vostok 1 flight, Popovich served as the flight's capcom.[3]
From May to August 1961, he trained to fly on spacecraft "Vostok-2" in a group of astronauts, followed (between September and November 1961) with training to fly "Vostok-3". This flight was cancelled.[4] Between November 1961 and May 1962, he trained as a pilot for "Vostok-4". Between June and August of that year, he received further training in the maintenance of this spacecraft.[4]
He commanded the space flight Vostok 4 (Russian: Восток-4) in 1962[1] which, along with Andrian Nikolayev on Vostok 3, was the first time that more than one manned spacecraft were in orbit at the same time. His call sign for this flight was Golden eagle (Бе́ркут).
In January 1964, he became a cosmonaut instructor, becoming deputy commander to the 2nd group of cosmonauts.[4]
Popovich was selected to command one of the Soviet Union's planned moon landings, and trained for this between 1966 and 1968, when the Soviet moon landing plans were scrapped.[3]
In 1968, he was selected as captain for Soyuz 2, but after the death of Vladimir Komarov during the reentry of Soyuz 1, Soyuz 2 was launched without a crew.
In 1969 he was a senior cosmonaut instructor, and became (by 1972) the Chief of cosmonaut training.[4]
In 1974, he commanded his second (and final) space flight Soyuz 14 (Russian: Союз 14) in 1974.[1] Again, his call sign for this flight was Golden eagle (Бе́ркут). This flight was the first to the Salyut 3 space station.
In 1977, he received a post-graduate degree in technical sciences.[1][4]
In March 1978, he was on duty in the Flight Control Center for Vladimír Remek's flight aboard Soyuz 28.
From 1978 he was the deputy chief of the Gagarin Cosmonauts Training Center responsible for research and testing work.[4] From 1980 to 1989, he was Deputy chief of the Cosmonaut Training Center. In January 1982, he was removed from the list of active cosmonauts, so that he could serve as Deputy Chief for Scientific Testing and Research at the Center.[4]
Details are from Space Encyclopedia ASTROnote, unless otherwise noted[4]
Honours awarded to Pavel Popvich (in order of first award) | |||||||||
|
Details are from Space Encyclopedia ASTROnote, unless otherwise noted[4]
Date of Award | Award |
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17 Jun 1961 | Order of the Red Star[1] |
1962 | Pilot Cosmonaut Of The Soviet Union[1] |
1962 | Honorable Radio Operator |
1962 | Honored Master of Sports of the USSRa |
1962 | Development Of The Virgin Lands |
19 Aug 1962 | Hero of the Soviet Unionb[1] |
19 Aug 1962 | Order of Lenin[1] |
15 Nov 1962 | Gold Star Labor Hero of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam[1] |
20 July 1974 | Hero of the Soviet Union[1] |
20 Jul 1974 | Order of Lenin[1] |
1982 | Order of Friendship of Peoples[1] |
13 May 1985 | Medal For Strengthening Combat Co-Operation |
9 Apr 1996 | Order of Honorc |
6 Oct 2000 | Order of Merit for the Fatherland, 4th Graded |
1 Dec 2005 | Ukrainian Order of Yaroslav the Wise, 4th Classe |
Unknown | Order of the Badge of Honor[1] |
Unknown | Medal of the Republic of Cuba |
Unknown | 9 Commemorative Medals |
Notes:
He received honorary citizenship of several cites:[1][2]
Notes:
A bronze sculpture to Popovich was established in Uzyn.[1]
The name of Pavel Popovich was given to a mountain ridge in Antarctica and a minor planet.[1][4]
In 1991, he became director of the Institute Rossiyskogo for Monitoring of Land and Ecosystems, then worked as chairman of the board of directors of the All-Russia Institute of Aero-Photo-Geodesic Studies (VISKhAGI), dealing with the compilation of a land inventory of Russia using images from space.[1][4]
He had also been the chairman of Ukrainian diaspora organisation in Russia.
He was awarded a Gold Tsiolkovsky Medal by the Academy of Sciences of the USSR and a De La Vaux Medal from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale.[2][4]
In 1984 Popovich joined the Russian Academy of Sciences' newly created All-Union Investigation Committee for Anomalous Aerial Phenomena and became head of the Academy's UFO Commission.
In the 2002 SciFi Channel documentary Out of the Blue, Popovich relays a sighting of a UFO next to the airplane he was travelling aboard as he was returning home from Washington D.C. with a delegation of scientists. The UFO was seen by everyone on board the plane. It was perfect triangle shaped and emitted a very bright, white light at a distance of about 1.5 kilometres and an altitude about 1,000 metres above the airplane. The object had en estimated speed of 1500 km/h travelling parallel to the airplane and passed and overtook the plane in about 30 to 40 seconds.[11]
Popovich was the president of the UFO association of Russia.
Details are from Space Encyclopedia ASTROnote, unless otherwise noted[4]