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Salyut 5

Salyut 5 (OPS-3)
Salyut program insignia.svg
Station statistics
Call sign Salyut 5
Crew 2
Launch 22 June 1976
18:04:00 UTC
Carrier rocket Proton-K
Launch pad Baikonur Site 81/23
Reentry 8 August 1977
Mass 19,000 kg
Length 14.55 metres (47.7 ft)
Diameter 4.15 metres (13.6 ft)
Pressurised volume 100 cubic metres (3,500 cu ft)
Perigee 223 kilometres (120 nmi)
Apogee 269 kilometres (145 nmi)
Orbital inclination 51.6°
Orbital period 89 minutes
Days in orbit 412 days
Days occupied 67 days
Number of orbits 6,666
Distance travelled Approx 270,409,616 kilometres (168,024,745 mi)
Configuration
Almaz drawing.svg
Salyut 5 diagram

Salyut 5 (Russian: Салют-5 meaning Salute 5), also known as OPS-3, was a Soviet space station. Launched in 1976 as part of the Salyut programme, it was the third and last Almaz space station to be launched for the Soviet military. Two Soyuz missions visited the station, each manned by two cosmonauts. A third Soyuz mission attempted to visit the station, but failed to dock, whilst a fourth mission was planned but never launched.

Salyut 5 was launched at 18:04:00 UTC on 22 June 1976. The launch took place from Site 81/23 the Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic, and used a three-stage Proton-K 8K82K carrier rocket with the serial number 290-02.

Upon reaching orbit, Salyut 5 was assigned the International Designator 1976-057A, whilst the North American Aerospace Defense Command gave it the Satellite Catalog Number 08911.

Salyut 5 was an Almaz spacecraft, the last of three to be launched as space stations after Salyut 2 and Salyut 3. Like its predecessors, it was 14.55 metres (47.7 ft) long, with a maximum diameter of 4.15 metres (13.6 ft). It had a habitable interior volume of 100 cubic metres (3,500 cu ft), and a mass at launch of 19,000 kilograms (42,000 lb). The station was equipped with a single docking port for Soyuz spacecraft, with the Soyuz 7K-T being the configuration in service at the time. Two solar arrays mounted laterally at the same end of the station as the docking port provided it with power. The station was equipped with a KSI capsule to return research data and materials.


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