Autor Wątek: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat  (Przeczytany 19941 razy)

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Offline Orionid

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #15 dnia: Kwietnia 01, 2020, 00:04 »
MissionControlMovie@missionmovie 6:30 PM · 30 mar 2020

We found this picture of a Soviet-US bonding event in #Wyoming - part of the #ApolloSoyuz Test Project preparations.

It's definitely of its time. We hope you enjoy it.

Let us know what #astronauts & #cosmonauts you recognise.

#NASA #1970sFashions #space #Apollo #Apollo50
https://twitter.com/missionmovie/status/1244663338828734465
« Ostatnia zmiana: Lipca 12, 2025, 08:13 wysłana przez mss »

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #16 dnia: Lipca 15, 2020, 00:12 »
45 lat mija od startu misji Sojuz-Apollo ;)

więcej: http://www.gctc.ru/main.php?id=5022

« Ostatnia zmiana: Lipca 12, 2025, 08:13 wysłana przez mss »
"Mathematics is the language in which God has written the universe." - Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642)

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #17 dnia: Lipca 17, 2020, 18:57 »
Film dokumentalny o przygotowaniach i samym locie:

« Ostatnia zmiana: Lipca 12, 2025, 08:13 wysłana przez mss »
"Mathematics is the language in which God has written the universe." - Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642)

Offline Orionid

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #18 dnia: Lutego 02, 2023, 20:07 »
50 lat temu, 30 stycznia 1973 roku, NASA oficjalnie ogłosiła skład amerykańskiej załogi.
Rosjanie ogłosili swoje załogi do ASTP 24 maja 1973 roku.

50 Years Ago: NASA Names U.S. Crew for the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
Jan 30, 2023
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/50-years-ago-nasa-names-us-crew-for-the-apollo-soyuz-test-project

EDIT 10.02./01.03.23
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1624068177155039233
https://twitter.com/ChasingMoonBk/status/1250844127010447360

TSR https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=4134.msg148042#msg148042
« Ostatnia zmiana: Lipca 12, 2025, 08:13 wysłana przez mss »

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #18 dnia: Lutego 02, 2023, 20:07 »

Offline JSz

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #19 dnia: Lutego 02, 2023, 20:58 »
Takie papierosy można było wówczas kupić. Także w Polsce, w każdym kiosku Ruchu:

« Ostatnia zmiana: Lipca 12, 2025, 08:12 wysłana przez mss »

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #20 dnia: Lipca 15, 2023, 16:49 »
Takie papierosy można było wówczas kupić. Także w Polsce, w każdym kiosku Ruchu: {...}
Ale z inną kolejnością raczej: Sojuz-Apollo.

48 lat temu, 15.07.1975, odbyły się dwa starty załogowych statków kosmicznych do pierwszego międzynarodowego wspólnego lotu.
Dziś żyje dwóch uczestników tego lotu:
Thomas Patten Stafford
Vance DeVoe Brand

Był to wtedy ostatni start RN Saturn IB i statku Apollo.

Apollo-Soyuz Test Project Launch Day | 48 Years Ago Today!


Cytuj
#OTD in 1975, NASA astronauts Tom Stafford, Deke Slayton and Vance Brand were on the last Apollo Saturn vehicle ever launched, ready to make history on the first crewed international mission: the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project!
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1680223194634911748
Cytuj
Un Jour - Un Objet Spatial
n° 0595 / 15 juillet 2023
Médaille argent Apollo-Soyouz / Présentation philatélique
(reprise d'après le #UnJourUnObjetSpatial n° 00049 de juillet 2018)
https://spacerelics.blogspot.com/2023/07/un-jour-un-objet-spatial-n-00595.html
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1680098367651577856
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Deke Slayton was selected as one of the original Mercury Seven, but a heart condition prevented him from flying on a Mercury mission. He finally made it to space on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, which launched on this day in 1975.
https://twitter.com/airandspace/status/1680368986725183490
https://www.polskieradio.pl/39/1240/Artykul/2773328,Misja-Sojuz-Apollo-Wspanialy-gest-jednosci-w-kosmosie
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #21 dnia: Lipca 15, 2023, 16:58 »
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Aleksiej Leonow i Tom Stafford byli architektami końca zimnej wojny między tymi dwoma krajami. Uwielbiali się nawzajem i darzyli się wielką sympatią i współudziałem.
(tu z okazji 35-lecia Apollo-Sojuz i pamiętnej kolacji)
Cytuj
15 juillet 1975
45 ans Apollo-Soyouz
Alexeï Leoov et Tom Stafford ont été les artisans de la fin de la duerre froide entre les deux pays. Ils s'adoraient et avaient une grande affection et complicité l'un pour l'autre
(ici pour les 35 ans Apollo-Soyouz et un dîner mémorable)
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1283160845711585280
« Ostatnia zmiana: Lipca 15, 2025, 19:14 wysłana przez Orionid »

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #22 dnia: Lipca 15, 2023, 17:07 »
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15 juillet 1975
Il y a 48 ans... Apollo-Soyouz
15 juillet 1975.... (partie 1)
Cytuj
45ème anniversaire de la mission Apollo-Soyouz qui voit s'arrimer le 17 juillet le vaisseau soviétique Soyouz (19) et le vaisseau américain Apollo (ASTP)
Retour sur cette formidable mission avec mon article des 40 ans😉
https://spacemen1969.blogspot.com/2015/07/
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1680096857534394369

Apollo-Soyuz Mission: When the Space Race Ended
By Eric Betz Jul 22, 2020 4:00 PM

The space race formally ended on July 17, 1975, when the U.S. and Soviet Union linked up in orbit and shook hands during the Apollo-Soyuz mission.


Soviet cosmonauts and American astronauts shake hands in orbit as the two nations' spacecraft dock during the Apollo-Soyuz mission. (Credit: NASA/Davis Meltzer)

On July 17, 1975, the U.S. and the Soviet Union docked two spacecraft together in orbit as part of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, humanity’s first international space mission. Over the course of two days, NASA astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts performed a series of scientific experiments and technology demonstrations. But the mission’s main purpose was far more earthly. It was a political demonstration of peace.

For some historians, the Apollo-Soyuz mission marked the formal end of the space race and the beginning of an extended era of international cooperation in space. Today the spaceflight gets credit for helping pave the way for the joint Shuttle-Mir space program, as well as the International Space Station.

“I really believe that we were sort of an example … to the countries,” astronaut Vance Brand said in a NASA oral history interview in 2000. “We were a little of a spark or a foot in the door that started better communications."

For decades, the space race had seen the two superpowers race to master and demonstrate many of the technologies needed to destroy each other with nuclear weapons. Yet, instead of ending in nuclear war, the space race concluded with a handshake in microgravity.



When the Soviet's launched humanity's first satellite, Sputnik 1, it caught the rest of the world by surprise. (Credit: NASA)

Brief History of the Space Race

On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1, humanity’s first satellite, stunning the world. America responded months later with its own spacecraft, Explorer 1. This back and forth continued to escalate, and in 1961, the Soviet Union put the first human into Earth orbit, once again demonstrating its technological superiority and forcing America to respond.

Amid the heightening Cold War tensions, U.S. officials went looking for some new goal that could be touted as evidence of America's dominance in space. To president John F. Kennedy’s administration, the moon seemed like the perfect fit. And most importantly, the timeline was long enough that America finally had a chance to beat the Soviets.

In a defining speech at Rice University in Texas in September of 1962, just one month before the Cuban Missile Crisis, Kennedy made America’s lunar intentions clear.

“We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things,” he said, “not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win.”

The bet paid off. By 1968, NASA’s moon program was far ahead of its Soviet rival. As the U.S. wrapped up preparations to send the first Apollo astronauts to the moon, the Soviet Union launched its Zond 5 spacecraft, carrying a pair of tortoises into lunar orbit.

“It really was one of those last hurrahs for the Soviet spaceflight program because it was one of the last times they were able to preempt the Americans in any real way,” Cathy Lewis, international space program curator for the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, told Discover in 2018.

And on July 20, 1969, America achieved a major milestone in the space race as the Apollo 11 crew walked on the moon. Over the course of four years, Apollo astronauts traveled to the lunar surface six times. No Soviet cosmonaut ever made the trip.

Apollo-Soyuz Mission

But the Soviet Union hadn’t set idle during that time. While America was putting boots on the moon, cosmonauts were racking up experience in low-Earth orbit, building humanity’s first space stations with the Salyut program. They were practiced in spaceflight. And their biological experiments putting animals in satellites had offered up new insights into how the environment of space can change the body.

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the two nations had repeatedly talked about cooperating in space and sharing scientific insights. But the Cold War tensions stopped any true exchange from taking place.

Then, in the early 1970s, as both countries were pushing new limits in spaceflight, a period of renewed cooperation called “Detente” developed on the ground. The Vietnam War was winding down, and both superpowers had just spent enormous fortunes expanding their military might. With the two sides eager for peace, the United States and the Soviet Union negotiated nuclear weapons control agreements and generally began easing tensions.



Soyuz commander Alexei Leonov greets NASA astronaut Deke Slayton after the Apollo-Soyuz docking. Both men were already legends in spaceflight at the time, adding drama to the moment. (Credit: NASA)

The Handshake in Space

To some politicians, the ultimate symbol of détente would be docking a Soviet capsule with an American one in low-Earth orbit for a “handshake in space.” Scientists and engineers saw benefits to such a joint mission, too. America had talented space pilots and advanced long-distance space technology. Meanwhile, the Soviets had focused on automation and had pioneered long-term spaceflights. Both had something the other was interested in learning about.

An American delegation traveled to Moscow in 1970 to lay the framework for the mission, and within two years, the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was officially born.

But not everyone liked the idea. Each side worried the other could steal its technology. Some defense hawks, and even a New York Times editorial board opinion, noted that Apollo-Soyuz offered a “technical and scientific bonanza for the Soviet Union's lagging astronautical program.” Meanwhile, the Soviets continued insulting American spacecraft.

Finally, three years after the final Apollo moon flight, the two superpowers overcame the political and engineering hurdles to make the rendezvous happen, including the design and development of an American-funded docking module that could mate the two crafts.

On July 15, 1975, a Soyuz capsule and an Apollo capsule — leftover from a canceled moon flight — launched within hours of each other from opposite sides of the planet. Then, two days later, they met up 140 miles over Earth’s surface.

“Soyuz and Apollo are shaking hands now,” Soyuz commander Alexei Leonov said as the two spacecraft gently docked. And as the door opened between the ships, the astronauts inside exchanged their own handshakes and posed for pictures.




‘They Probably Thought We Were Monsters’

Over the next two days, the men learned to work together as they toured the other country’s spacecraft and carried out five joint scientific experiments. At first, though, they struggled to even communicate. Each wanted to speak their own language, but they eventually realized that they all understood things better when they attempted to speak the other’s language.

“We [the Americans] thought they [the Soviets] were pretty aggressive people and ... they probably thought we were monsters,” Brand said. “So we very quickly broke through that, because when you deal with people that are in the same line of work as you are, and you're around them for a short time, why, you discover that, well, they're human beings."

Together, the crew helped their space agencies gather new technical and scientific insights. One experiment tested the effects of low-gravity on the development of fish eggs. Another created an artificial solar eclipse using the Apollo capsule to block the sun while cosmonauts took pictures of the solar corona.



The International Space Station keeps quietly ticking along. (Credit: NASA)

Peace in Orbit

The moment of peace in space was admittedly brief. Just two days after docking, the ships parted ways. And before long, Cold War tensions reemerged.

After Apollo-Soyuz, no American astronaut would venture to space for roughly six years, until the first space shuttle launched in 1981. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, followed by Russia, kept sending their Soyuz capsules into orbit.

However, the two countries did eventually collaborate in space again — first with the Shuttle-Mir program, then with the $150 billion International Space Station, which was largely funded by U.S. taxpayers. And when the Space Shuttle Program came to a close in 2011, NASA was left with no way to keep putting astronauts in orbit themselves. The U.S. had to buy tickets to the International Space Station on Soviet Soyuz capsules.

In fact, Apollo-Soyuz was the last time NASA astronauts rode an American capsule into orbit until May 2020, when SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft delivered astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to the ISS.

So, the space race may have ended in a handshake, but the questions and challenges of Apollo-Soyuz have never gone away. The U.S. continues to partner with Russia in space, and pay for the privilege, even as the two countries continue to challenge each other on terra firma.

https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/apollo-soyuz-mission-when-the-space-race-ended
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #23 dnia: Lipca 15, 2023, 17:10 »
12:04 AM · Jul 17, 2020
Cytuj
17 juillet 1975...
Il y a 45 ans... Arrimage entre Soyouz et Apollo
''Handshake in space" !
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1283885118604685314

APOLLO AND SOYUZ SHIFT THEIR ORBITS FOR LINK‐UP TODAY
By John Noble Wilford Special to The New York Times July 17, 1975

HOUSTON, July 16—Apollo and Soyuz, two spaceships on separate courses but with one common goal, maneuvered smoothly into new orbits today in preparation for tomorrow's first international rendezvous in space.

The Soviet astronauts, CoI. Aleksei A. Leonov and Valery N. Kubasov, fired the Soyuz propulsion system to settle into an almost circular orbit some 140 miles above the earth. The firing came at 3:43 P.M., Moscow time (8:43 A.M., Eastern daylight time).

This put the Soyuz into its prearranged position where it is to orbit passively while the American astronauts steer the Apollo higher and closer, horning in for the planned link‐up between the two ships at 12:15 P.M., Eastern daylight time, tomorrow.

Apollo Rockets Fired

A brief firing of the Apollo's small maneuvering rockets at 4:18 P.M. altered slightly the plane and altitude of its orbit, which is now ranging from a low of 108 miles to a high of 143 miles.

The American astronauts—Brig. Gen. Thomas P. Stafford of the Air. Force, Vance D. Brand and Donald K. Slayton —plan a series of similar rocket maneuvers tomorrow morning that should bring the two spaceships within direct radio contact over the Pacific Ocean and within sight of each other over Chile.

The docking is to take place about 140 miles over Germany, and will be televised. A short while later, General Stafford and Colonel Leonov are to meet, shake hands and begin two days of joint activities in the linked spacecraft..

No Big Problems Reported

Soviet and American space officials reported that no problems had arisen thus far that would interfere with the rendezvous and docking. The spacecraft were launched yesterday, first the Soyuz from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Soviet Central Asia and then the Apollo from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

At a news conference here, Frank Littleton, the American flight director in charge of maintaining liaison with the Soviet mission control, said:

“We have a good situation going here. Things are going smoothly on both sides.”

M. P. Frank, the chief flight director for Apollo, reported that “everything seems to be going well” and that the American astronauts were “working efficiently and in good spirits.”

Two mechanical problems, one Soviet and one American, turned out to be minor.

A Soyuz television camera, which failed during lift‐off, was restored to service by reconnecting some cables.

Mr. Brand finally succeeded this morning in removing a probe that had become stuck after yesterday's link‐up of the Apollo with its docking module, the 10‐foot‐long unit that will be the connecting passage between the Apollo and Soyuz. The probe had to be removed before the astronauts could enter the docking module and check it out before tomorrow's rendezvous.

Told to Use Screwdriver

Engineers at the Johnson Space Center here instructed Mr. Brand to disassemble and then reassemble the balky, probe with a screwdriver.

After the Soyuz astronauts heard of the problem, they asked their mission control outside Moscow for status reports and were assured:

“The technology seems to be clear and they [the Americans] know what to do and how to do it. So everything is in order.”

One of the Apollo flight controllers, Donald R. Puddy, said that the exchange of information back and forth between Moscow and Houston “has been every good.”

The Russians normally keep us very. well abreast of the problems they think will affect our joint activities,” Mr. Puddy said. “And likewise, we're doing the same thing for them.”

Soon after the Apollo astronauts were awakened today, mission control here informed them of the successful changeof‐orbit maneuver by the Soyuz.

‘All in Good Shape’

“Your friends up there just off their circ [circularization] burn and it's all in good shape, so they're in orbit waiting for you,” said the capsule communicator, Richard Truly.

“Superb, Great,” General Stafford commented.

At that moment, the Apollo commander was trying to clean up after a breakfast accident. A food bag had broken and scattered floating droplets of strawberry juice throughout the cabin, splattering one window of the spacecraft.

“We now have a strawberrycolored spacecraft,” General Stafford told mission control, while wiping the mess.

The trouble with the stuck probe put the Apollo astronauts somewhat behind in their, flight plan for the morning. Much of the time was spent by Mr. Slayton checking out the systems in the docking module. No problems were encountered.

While Mr. Slayton was presparing the docking module for the link‐up, the Soyuz, astronauts reduced the air pressure in their spacecraft from a normal sea‐level pressure of 14.7 pounds per square inch down to 10 pounds. They also increased the amount of oxygen in their nitrogen‐oxygen atmosphere.

Since the Apollo's pressure is only five pounds, and its atmosphere is pure oxygen, the change in the Soyuz atmosphere, was necessary to prevent decompression problems when the astronauts come to visit the Soyuz. The docking module serves as an airlock where astronauts are to adjust to the different spacecraft atmosphere. before transferring from one‐craft to the other. The acclimation and transfer should take about 30 minutes.

https://www.nytimes.com/1975/07/17/archives/apollo-and-soyuz-shift-their-orbits-for-linkup-today-soviet.html

Apollo and Soyuz Blast into Orbit for a Rendezvous
By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD July 16, 1975

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Three Americans astronauts rode an Apollo spaceship into orbit today to begin their part in the historic rendezvous in space between the United States and the Soviet Union.

Rising on a tail of fire, filling the air with thunder and causing the ground to shake, the Saturn 1-B rocket thrust the 16-ton Apollo out over the Atlantic Ocean on a northeasterly course, piercing a cloud and disappearing into the blue.

The lift-off occurred on schedule at 3:50 P.M., Eastern daylight time--seven and a half hours after two Soviet astronauts soared into space from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Soviet Central Asia, 10,000 miles from the Kennedy Space Center here.

Rendezvous and Link-Up

The Apollo astronauts and the Soyuz astronauts are scheduled to rendezvous Thursday morning over South America and then unite their spaceships 140 miles above Germany. The link-up, the first between spacecraft of two nations, is to occur shortly after noon on Thursday.

Soon after they reached orbit, the American astronauts--Brig. Gen. Thomas P. Stafford of the Air Force, Vance D. Brand and Donald K. Slayton--took the first steps leading toward the rendezvous. They linked the nose of the cone-shaped Apollo into a 10-foot-long docking module, which will serve as the linking passage between the Apollo and the Soyuz, and conducted rocket firings to get into position for the rendezvous.

Flight controllers at the Johnson Space Center in Houston reported only one problem with the Apollo spacecraft, a helium bubble in a propellant tank, but said it should be eliminated easily with a purging of the tank.

Dobrynin Views Lift-Off

Among the hundreds of thousands of people watching the launching--the last for an Apollo, the craft that took men to the moon--was the Soviet Ambassador to the United States, Anatoly F. Dobrynin. He viewed the lift-off from the firing room.

"Well done!" Mr. Dobrynin said in a short speech to the American launching team. "Without your magnificent performance here the mission would be impossible. The best of wishes to all of you, and, of course, to both our crews. My heart is with you."

The Soviet Ambassador was applauded warmly.

Dr. James C. Fletcher, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, told the launching team:

"You're making history today. This is the first step on a long mission and a first step on a long program with the Soviet Union."

The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, as the mission is called, was agreed to by the two nations, once fierce rivals in space exploration, in Moscow in May, 1972. NASA officials have said that exploratory talks have already been held with a view to future cooperative space ventures.

Earlier in the day, at 8:20 A.M., the American launching officials paused in their countdown preparations to watch on closed-circuit television the Soyuz lift-off. It was the first time a Soviet launching had ever been televised live.

"It was quite exciting and thrilling," remarked Walter J. Kapryan, the director of launching operations at the Kennedy Space Center. "As soon as the Soyuz was orbited, it put the pressure on our backs."

As the Soviet mission control outside Moscow fed frequent status reports to the Americans during the day, technicians at launch complex 39-B fueled the two-stage, 224-foot-tall Saturn rocket.

Liquid oxygen was pumped into the two stages at a rate of 1,200 gallons a minute. The first stage had already been loaded with a kerosene-type propellant. Later, the second stage was filled with 66,000 gallons of its liquid hydrogen propellant.

The American astronauts were awakened at 10:30 A.M. and shown videotapes of the Soyuz launching while they ate breakfast. They were also given an encouraging weather report.

A Problem Arises

One problem during the otherwise flawless preparations caused Mr. Kapryan "some consternation." Technicians feared that they might have trouble operating the hydraulic controls of the launching tower swing arms, the mighty steel grips that hold the rocket upright until immediately after ignition of all eight Saturn 1-B engines.

Kapryan said that the technicians had "worked around" the problem so that it did not interrupt the countdown. The swing arms retracted without a hitch.

Once, while the astronauts sat in their spacecraft atop the rocket, and checked out guidance systems, General Stafford asked for a report on the Soyuz progress.

"Any word on the guys up there?" the Apollo commander asked.

Paul Donnelly, the launching operations manager, reported that Soyuz astronauts had just completed a maneuver to adjust their orbit and that all was going well.

Then came the suspense of the final seconds of the countdown. The sky was blue with only a few scattered clouds. Oxygen vapors billowed from the side of the Saturn. Computers took over the final check-out of all systems--the countdown was on "automatic sequencer."

Craft Blasts Off

Ignition of all eight first-stage engines sent a burst of red flame to the base of the launching pad, a thrust downward that drove the rocket and spacecraft upward, clearing the red-steel launching tower and gathering speed.

After nearly two and a half minutes, the first stage shut down and was jettisoned. The single engine of the upper stage lighted, creating a momentary spark in the sky.

For a minute after the launching, the trail of the last Apollo Saturn rocket was traced by a series of white clouds, from the launching pad up to a puff of vapor given off when the rocket entered the stratosphere.

For the first time in the American space program, a television camera inside the Apollo cabin transmitted pictures of the astronauts as they lay strapped in their form-fitted couches, monitoring systems as their bodies withstood 4 G's--pressure four times greater than earth gravity normally exerts.

"Right on the money," mission control informed the astronauts as the Apollo eased into orbit nearly 10 minutes after lift-off.

The Apollo's initial orbit ranged from a low of 95 miles to a high of 105.6. This was only slightly higher than had been planned.

While all this was happening, the Soyuz spacecraft had just passed southeast of Florida on its sixth revolution. A carefully planned operation of orbital seek-and-find was under way, the Apollo chasing the Soyuz.

Links With Docking Module

At 5:04 P.M. the Apollo separated from the upper Saturn stage. With General Stafford steering, the spacecraft was pitched 180 degrees and its nose inserted into one end of the docking module. The module had ridden into orbit attached to the upper end of the Saturn rocket.

"We got a real hard dock," General Stafford reported to mission control.

Later, the Apollo extracted the docking module from the trusses that had held it attached to the Saturn. The Apollo now had secured the unit that is to be its connecting link with the Soyuz for two days beginning Thursday.

At 7:35 P.M., Apollo began the first of its maneuvers aimed at the rendezvous. A brief firing of the Apollo's main rockets sent the spacecraft into a near-circular orbit 105 miles above the earth, considerably lower than the Soyuz orbit of 115.8 by 137.6 miles.

A second rocket firing occurred at 9:30 P.M. to help the Apollo begin to close the distance between it and the Soyuz. Flight controllers said that all systems were performing normally.

Tomorrow, the sixth anniversary of the take-off toward the first lunar landing, American astronauts in space will take further steps toward their planned link-up with the Soyuz and will conduct many scientific experiments.

With the Apollo's course shaped for rendezvous by circularization maneuvers carried out tonight, maneuvering tomorrow will be left largely to the Soyuz craft, which is scheduled to circularize its orbital pathway with a rocket firing at 8:46 A.M. (E.D.T.). At 4:42 P.M. (E.D.T.), the Apollo craft has an opportunity to carry out a corrective maneuver if one is required.

The Soyuz maneuver to place itself on a circular pathway 140 miles above the earth is to take place just as the Apollo astronauts wake up.

Hatch to Be Stowed

Slayton, the docking module pilot, will begin his work tomorrow by removing and stowing the Apollo cabin's upper hatch. This hatch will not be used again until late in the flight when the Apollo crew is scheduled to jettison the docking module.

After checking the ability of the docking module to withstand atmospheric pressure, Mr. Slayton is to equalize the pressure within the module and the Apollo cabin, open the module's Apollo-side hatch, activate some of its systems, and set up television cameras to record the first meeting of the American and Soviet astronauts scheduled for Thursday afternoon.

Meanwhile, Brand is scheduled to begin work on an experiment involving hatching the eggs of a common salt water fish in the weightlessness of space. A similar experiment carried out during the Skylab program proved inconclusive when most of the fish that hatched died before splashdown and the rest died before scientists could examine them.

Later in the day, the Apollo is to operate a West German biological experiment and carry out observations of the earth.

https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/library/national/science/nasa/071675sci-nasa-wilford.html
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #24 dnia: Lipca 15, 2023, 17:13 »
12:25 AM · Jul 24, 2020
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24 juillet 1975...
Il y a 45 ans, fin de la mission Apollo-Soyouz avec le retour de la capsule Apollo (qui faillit se terminer tragiquement suite à la fermeture d'une mauvaise vanne)
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1286427128096067584
https://twitter.com/bzxbsszVJE8wCzn/status/1548823733640757248
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #25 dnia: Lipca 17, 2023, 11:46 »
17.07.1975 o 16:09:12 nastąpiło połącznie Sojuza 19 ze statkiem Apollo.
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On this day in 1975, a US Apollo spacecraft and USSR Soyuz spacecraft docked during the first joint venture in space between the US and Soviet Union: the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project.
https://twitter.com/airandspace/status/1548675142846406658

17.07.1975 o 14:17:26 Thomas Stafford otworzył właz, który prowadził do modułu orbitalnego Sojuza 19
Tom Stafford i Aleksiej Leonow dokonują pierwszego międzynarodowego spotkania na orbicie
https://twitter.com/airandspace/status/1548810784104497154

Emblemat lotu i podpis Leonowa.
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Il y a 48 ans, arrimage et poignée de main des deux commandants.
Ici, des patchs très inhabituels, des ''bullion patch'' (avec des fils d'or, tissu et légèrement métallisés), réservés pour certains médias, et signés par Alexeï Leonov
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1680850309235523584
https://www.spaceline.org/united-states-manned-space-flight/apollo-soyuz-test-project-mission-fact-sheet/

2)
Soyuz 7K-TM variant for the US-Soviet joint mission


https://www.russianspaceweb.com/soyuz-7k-tm.html

3)
https://twitter.com/ron_eisele/status/1813287055012556917
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17 July 1975. 16.19.09 UTC/GMT. American Apollo and a Soviet Soyuz spacecraft docked in orbit. The first international space mission. Apollo–Soyuz was the last manned United States spaceflight for nearly six years until the first launch of the Space Shuttle in April 1981.
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #26 dnia: Lipca 07, 2025, 12:37 »
06.07.1975 Dahomej (obecnie Benin) wydał zestaw trzech znaczków dotyczących misji Apollo-Sojuz.
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6 mars 1975
Il y a 50 ans émission d'une émission de 3 timbres pour la mission Apollo-Soyouz par le Dahomey (aujourd'hui Bénin)
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1941619597926703118
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1941889753013535103


2)
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Stephane SEBILE @spacemen1969 12:07 AM · Jul 14, 2025
14 juillet 1975
Il y a 50 ans, la Roumanie célèbre la mission Apollo-soyouz dont les deux vaisseaux vont décoller le 15 juillet.
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1944518952543261049


3)
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Stephane SEBILE @spacemen1969 6:05 PM · Jul 9, 2024
Un Jour - Un Objet Spatial
n° 644 - 9 juillet 2024
Exemples de ''Bullion'' patch
ASTP / Apollo-Soyouz
https://spacerelics.blogspot.com/2024/07/un-jour-un-objet-spatial-n-00644-astp.html
#UnJourUnObjetSpatial
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1810706729631728079
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #27 dnia: Lipca 12, 2025, 08:08 »
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NASA History Office @NASAhistory
10 lip
50 years ago, the three NASA astronauts preparing to fly on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project—Deke Slayton, Tom Stafford, and Vance Brand—were gearing up for their launch. During their three-week preflight quarantine, they continued simulations, training, and other preparations.


https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/1943339252219023482

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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #28 dnia: Lipca 15, 2025, 08:39 »
Dziś mija 43. rocznica startu Sojuza 19 i Apollo ASTP.
Dziś żyje trzech uczestników wspólnego lotu.
Dziś w 50. rocznicę żyje tylko jeden:
Aleksiej Archipowicz Leonow (1934-2019)
Walerij Nikołajewicz Kubasow (1935-2014)
Thomas Patten Stafford (1930-2024)
  Vance DeVoe Brand 1931
Donald Kent 'Deke' Slayton (1924-1993)

Misja, która była prekursorem załogowej współpracy w kosmosie.
Trwa oczekiwanie na spektakularnie uświetnienie tej rocznicy przez wodowanie w pełni międzynarodowej załogi Crew Dragon Axiom-4/ignis C213 Grace F1.

Historyczna ilustracja z belgijskiego tygodnika komiksowego Tintin, który ukazał się z datą 05.08.1975.
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Stephane SEBILE @spacemen1969 6:02 PM · Mar 13, 2022
Un Jour - Un Objet Spatial n° 00505 / 13 mars 2022 Mission Apollo-Soyouz
Journal de Tintin  n° 135 du 5 août 1975
http://spacerelics.blogspot.com/2022/03/un-jour-un-objet-spatial-n-00505-apollo.html
#UnJourUnObjetSpatial
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1503053958625046528

2)
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15 juillet 1975 12:08 AM · Jul 15, 2025
Et pour rester dans le thème (et pour rester dans 50 ans ASTP)😉
Une enveloppe "Birthplace" de Vance Brand né à Longmont (Colorado) et ici, signée par ses parents datée du retour  (j'en avais deux et il avait été très ému quand je lui en avait offerte une)
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1944881592276562349

3)
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Stephane SEBILE @spacemen1969 12:09 AM · Jul 15, 2025
15 juillet 1975
50 ans Apollo-Soyouz
Ou cette autre enveloppe ''birthplace'' datée du décollage de Weatherford (Oklahoma) signée par Mary Ellen Stafford, la mère de Tom Stafford
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1944881843897065724

4)
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Stephane SEBILE @spacemen1969 3:20 PM · Jul 15, 2025
15 juillet 1975
50 ans Apollo-Soyouz / ASTP
Un Jour - Un Objet Spatial
n° 00681 / 15 juillet 2025
Médaillon Apollo-Soyouz
Flown Metal avec du métal
ayant volé dans l'espace
https://spacerelics.blogspot.com/2025/07/un-jour-un-objet-spatial-n-00681.html
https://twitter.com/spacemen1969/status/1945111104327442835
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #29 dnia: Lipca 15, 2025, 19:00 »
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Stephane SEBILE @spacemen1969
15 juillet 1975.... (partie 1)

50ème anniversaire de la mission Apollo-Soyouz qui voit s'arrimer le 17 juillet le vaisseau soviétique Soyouz (19) et le vaisseau américain Apollo (ASTP)

Retour sur cette formidable mission avec mon article des 40 ans😉

https://spacemen1969.blogspot.com/2015/07/40eme-anniversaire-de-la-mission-apollo.html

https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1944880334366978436
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Odp: Misja Apollo-Sojuz - 50 lat
« Odpowiedź #29 dnia: Lipca 15, 2025, 19:00 »