Sergei Avdeyev

Sergei Avdeyev
Cosmonaut
Nationality Russian
Born (1956-01-01) 1 January 1956
Chapayevsk, Russia
Other occupation
Engineer
Time in space
747d 14h 14m
Selection 1987
Missions Soyuz TM-15, Soyuz TM-22, Soyuz TM-28/Soyuz TM-29
Awards

Sergei Vasilyevich Avdeyev (Сергей Васильеви Авдеев, born 1 January 1956) is a Russian engineer and cosmonaut.

Avdeyev was born in Chapayevsk, Samara Oblast (formerly Kuybyshev Oblast), Russian SFSR. He graduated from Moscow Physics-Engineering Institute in 1979 as an engineer-physicist. From 1979 to 1987 he worked as an engineer for NPO Energiya. He was selected as a cosmonaut as part of the Energia Engineer Group 9 on 26 March 1987. His basic cosmonaut training was from December 1987 through to July 1989. He retired as a cosmonaut on 14 February 2003.

Avdeyev at one point held the record for cumulative time spent in space with 747.59 days in earth orbit, accumulated through three tours of duty aboard the Mir Space Station. He has orbited the earth 11,968 times traveling about 515,000,000 kilometers. In August 2005, this record was taken by another cosmonaut, Sergei K. Krikalev.

Avdeyev is married with two children. He is an amateur radio operator, and his call sign is RV3DW.

Time dilation record

For a long time, Avdeyev held the record for time dilation experienced by a human being.[1][2][3] In his 747 days aboard Mir, cumulative across three missions, he went approximately 27,360 km/h and thus aged roughly 0.02 seconds (20 milliseconds) less than an Earthbound person would have,[4] which is considerably more than any other human being, except Sergei Krikalev.[5] This is due to the special relativistic effect of time dilation and is not properly thought of as time travelling as described by mainstream culture. A common misconception is that the Apollo astronauts hold the record—they did go faster than Avdeyev, but they were only in space for a few days.

Spaceflights

Spacewalks (42 hours, 2 minutes)

Honours and awards

References

  1. "Exploring the Universe". American Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 8 July 2011. Avdeyev is 00.2 seconds younger than he would have been had he never traveled in space.
  2. rstevens (14 November 2001). "Time travel: Truth not always stranger than science fiction". Princeton University. Retrieved 8 July 2011. 'The greatest time traveler so far is (cosmonaut) Sergei Avdeyev, who, by virtue of being on space flights for 748 days, is one-fiftieth of a second younger than if he had stayed home. So that man has traveled one-fiftieth of a second into the future.'
  3. Mowbray, Scott (19 February 2002). "Let's Do the Time Warp Again". Popular Science. Retrieved 8 July 2011. Spending just over two years in Mir's Earth orbit, going 17,500 miles per hour, put Sergei Avdeyev 1/50th of a second into the future…'he's the greatest time traveler we have so far.'
  4. Gott, J. Richard (2002). "Time Travel in Einstein's Universe". p. 75
  5. Overbye, Dennis (28 June 2005). "A Trip Forward in Time. Your Travel Agent: Einstein.". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 December 2015.

See also

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