Voskhod (spacecraft)
Voskhod 1 and 2 spacecraft | |
Type | Space capsule |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Korolev |
Designed by | Sergei Korolev |
Maiden flight | 1964 |
Introduced | 1964 |
Retired | 1965 |
Status | Last 4 flights cancelled |
Primary users | Soviet space program |
Built | 4+ |
Variants | Vostok spacecraft, Foton |
The Voskhod (Russian: Восход, "Sunrise") was a spacecraft built by the Soviet Union's space program for human spaceflight as part of the Voskhod programme. It was a development of and a follow-on to the Vostok spacecraft. Voskhod 1 was used for a three manned flight whereas Voskhod 2 had a crew of two. They consisted of a spherical descent module (diameter 2.3 meters), which housed the cosmonauts, and instruments, and a conical equipment module (mass 2.27 tonnes, 2.25 m long, 2.43 m wide), which contained propellant and the engine system. Voskhod was superseded by the Soyuz spacecraft in 1967.
Design
The Voskhod spacecraft was basically a Vostok spacecraft that had a backup solid fuel retro rocket added to the top of the descent module. The ejection seat was removed for more space and two or three crew couches were added to the interior at a 90-degree angle to that of the Vostok crew position. There was no provision for crew escape in the event of a launch or landing emergency.
Lack of space meant that the three crew members of Voskhod 1 did not wear space suits.[1] Both crew members wore spacesuits on the Voskhod 2 mission, as it involved an EVA and used an inflatable airlock. This allowed cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov to exit and re-enter the craft. It was needed because the vehicle's electrical and environmental systems were air-cooled, and complete capsule depressurization would lead to overheating. The airlock weighed 250 kg, was 700 mm in diameter, 770 mm high when collapsed for launch. When extended in orbit, it was 2.5 m long, had an internal diameter of 1.0 m and an external diameter of 1.2 m. The second crew member wore a spacesuit as a precaution against accidental descent module depressurization. The air lock was jettisoned after use.
The lack of ejection seats meant that the Voskhod crew would return to Earth inside their spacecraft unlike the Vostok cosmonauts who ejected and parachuted down separately. Because of this, a new landing system was developed, which added a small solid-fuel rocket to the parachute lines. It fired as the descent module neared touchdown, providing a softer landing. A backup solid-fuel retrorocket was added to the top of the descent module. The original Vostok spacecraft only had one liquid fuel retrorocket. A backup was not needed since its supplies lasted for a 10-day flight, which would allow for reentry by orbital decay if the retrorocket failed.
This spacecraft was carried into orbit by the Voskhod rocket, also developed from the earlier Vostok rocket and ultimately derived from the R-7 ICBM.
Vostok 3KV (1964)
Also known as Voskhod. Adaptation of the Vostok spacecraft for three cosmonauts. This version flew twice, on 6 October 1964 unmanned (as Kosmos 47) and on 12 October 1964 manned as Voskhod 1.
Basic data
- Crew size: 3 (without spacesuits)
- Endurance: 14.0 days
- Overall length: 5.0 m
- Maximum diameter: 2.4 m
- Total mass: 5,682 kg
- Propellant mass: 362 kg
- RCS total impulse: not available
- Primary engine thrust: 15.83 kN
- Main engine propellants: nitrous oxide/amine
- Total spacecraft delta v: 215 m/s
- Power: batteries; 24.0 kW total
Reentry module
- Crew size: 3
- Diameter: 2.3 m (sphere)
- Total mass: 2,900 kg
- Attitude control: none
- Environment: oxygen + nitrogen at 1 atm
- Controls: as Vostok 3KA
- Navigation indicator: Globus IMP navigation instrument version 3[2]
- Landing system: Sphere made ballistic reentry, with shield side seeking correct orientation by virtue of the center of gravity being aft of the center of the sphere.
- Parachutes: single with suspended retrorocket package for soft landing. Crew stayed within the capsule.
Equipment module
- Length: 2.3 m
- Maximum diameter: 2.4 m
- Total mass: 2,300 kg
- Propellant mass: 275 kg
- Reaction control system
- thrusters: not available
- propellant: cold gas (nitrogen)
- specific impulse: not available
- total impulse: not available
- Retro-rockets
- thrust: 15.83 kN
- propellant: nitrous oxide/amine
- specific impulse: 266 s
- delta v: 155 m/s
- Power: batteries; 24.0 kW total, 0.20 kW average
Auxiliary retrorocket module
Length: 0.6 m Maximum diameter: 0.3 m Total mass: 143 kg Propellant mass: 87 kg Thrust: 117.7 kN Propellant: solid Specific impulse: 224 s Delta v: 60 m/s
Voskhod 3KD (1965)
This version flew twice, on 22 February 1965 unmanned (as Kosmos 57) and on 18 March 1965 manned as the Voskhod 2 spacecraft.
Reentry Module
Reentry Module: Voskhod SA. Also known as: Spuskaemiy apparat - Sharik (sphere).
- Crew Size: 2
- Length: 2.3 m
- Diameter: 2.3 m
- Mass: 2,900 kg
- Heat Shield Mass: 837 kg
- Recovery equipment: 151 kg
- Parachute deploys at 2.5 km altitude
- Crew lands in spacecraft. Touchdown rocket softens landing.
- Ballistic reentry acceleration: 8 g (78 m/s²)
Equipment Module
Equipment Module: Voskhod PA. Also known as: Priborniy otsek.
- Length: 2.25 m
- Diameter: 2.43 m
- Mass: 2,300 kg
- Equipment in pressurized compartment
- RCS Propellants: Cold gas (nitrogen)
- RCS Propellants: 20 kg
- Main Engine (TDU): 397 kg
- Main Engine Thrust: 15.83 kN
- Main Engine Propellants: Nitrous oxide/amine
- Main Engine Propellant Mass: 275 kg
- Main Engine Isp: 266 s (2.61 kN·s/kg)
- Main Engine Burn Time: 1 minute (typical retro burn = 42 seconds)
- Spacecraft delta v: 155 m/s
- Electrical System: Batteries
- Electric System: 0.20 average kW
- Electric System: 24.0 kW h
Auxiliary Retrorocket Module
Auxiliary Retrorocket Module: Voskhod KDU. Also known as: Engine unit
- Length: 0.60 m
- Diameter: 0.25 m
- Mass: 143 kg
- Engine Thrust: 118 kN
- Engine Propellants: Solid
- Propellant Mass: 87 kg
- Engine Isp: 224 s (2.20 kN·s/kg)
- Spacecraft delta v: 60 m/s
General data
- Total Mass:5,682 kg
- Total Length: 5.0 m
- Endurance: Supplies for 14 days in orbit
- Launch Vehicle: Voskhod 11A57
- Typical orbit: 163 km x 591 km, 64.8 inclinaton
See also
- Voskhod 2
- Voskhod rocket
- Voskhod programme
- Spacecraft
- Voskhod Spacecraft Globus IMP navigation instrument
References
- ↑ Siddiqi 2000, p. 423.
- ↑ Collins, Amy Kyra. "Globe Device - IMP (глобус)". The Panels of the Spacecraft "Vostok".
Bibliography
- Siddiqi, Asif A. (2000). Challenge To Apollo: The Soviet Union and the Space Race, 1945-1974. USA: NASA. ISBN 1780393016.
External links
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