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Soyuz 39

Soyuz 39
COSPAR ID 1981-029A
SATCAT no. 12366
Mission duration 7 days, 20 hours, 42 minutes, 3 seconds
Orbits completed 124
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type Soyuz 7K-T
Manufacturer NPO Energia
Launch mass 6,800 kilograms (15,000 lb)
Crew
Crew size 2
Members Vladimir Dzhanibekov
Jügderdemidiin Gürragchaa
Callsign Pamir (Pamirs)
Start of mission
Launch date 22 March 1981, 14:58:55 (1981-03-22UTC14:58:55Z) UTC
Rocket Soyuz-U
Launch site Baikonur 1/5
End of mission
Landing date 30 March 1981, 11:40:58 (1981-03-30UTC11:40:59Z) UTC
Landing site 175 km SE of Dzhezkazgan
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Low Earth
Perigee 197.5 kilometres (122.7 mi)
Apogee 282.8 kilometres (175.7 mi)
Inclination 51.6 degrees
Period 89.1 minutes
Docking with Salyut 6

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Soyuz programme
(Manned missions)
← Soyuz T-4
Soyuz 40 →

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Soyuz 39 was a 1981 Soviet manned space flight to the Salyut 6 space station. It was the fifteenth expedition, and carried the eighth international crew to the orbiting facility. The crew visited Vladimir Kovalyonok and Viktor Savinykh, who had reached Salyut-6 ten days prior.

The flight carried Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Jügderdemidiin Gürragchaa into space. With this mission, Gürragchaa became the first Mongolian, and second Asian cosmonaut.

The Mongolian contribution for this mission had begun in 1967, when the president of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences Bazaryn Shirendev attended a conference of scientists from socialist countries in Moscow, where the Intercosmos project was announced. Dzhanibekov and Gürragchaa performed about thirty experiments during the course of the mission.

Soyuz 39 docked with the first Mongolian cosmonaut aboard. The resident EO-6 crew assisted the Intercosmos crew with station equipment and oriented the station according to the needs of the visiting crew's experiments.

On 24 March, the cosmonauts installed cosmic ray detectors in the station's work and transfer compartments. On 26 March the cosmonauts performed the Illuminator ("viewing port") experiment, which studied the degradation of the station’s viewports. On 27 March, Vladimir Kovalyonok and Viktor Savinykh of the resident crew used the Gologramma ("hologram") apparatus to image a viewing port damaged by micrometeoroids. They repeated this experiment the next day, when they also collected samples of the station’s air and microflora and removed the cosmic ray detectors for return to Earth. 28-29 March were largely devoted to studies of Mongolia from space. The visiting crew also checked out their spacecraft on 29 March


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