Puneet Varma (Editor)

Korabl Sputnik 5

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Mission type
  
Biological Technology

SATCAT no.
  
95

Manufacturer
  
OKB-1

Mission duration
  
1.8 hours

Date
  
25 March 1961

Landing date
  
25 March 1961

Harvard designation
  
1961 Iota 1

Spacecraft type
  
Vostok-3KA

Period
  
1.5 hours

Apogee
  
230,000 m

Launch date
  
25 March 1961

Launch site
  
Baikonur Cosmodrome

Korabl-Sputnik 5 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Launch mass
  
4,695 kilograms (10,351 lb)

Korabl-Sputnik 5 (Russian: Корабль-Спутник 5 meaning Ship-Satellite 5) or Vostok-3KA No.2, also known as Sputnik 10 in the West, was a Soviet spacecraft which was launched in 1961, as part of the Vostok programme. It was the last test flight of the Vostok spacecraft design prior the first manned flight, Vostok 1. It carried the mannequin Ivan Ivanovich, a dog named Zvezdochka ("Starlet", or "Little star"), television cameras and scientific apparatus.

Contents

Background

A spacecraft of the design Vostok 3KA had only been launched once before, which was on March 9, 1961. This mission was called Korabl-Sputnik 4, and it was a complete success. Prior to Korabl-Sputnik 4, the two previous missions in the Vostok programme were both launched in December 1960, and both ended in failure.

Only days before the launch of Korabl-Sputnik 5, the cosmonaut team, which consisted of 20 men, experienced its first fatality. Cosmonaut candidate Valentin Bondarenko was killed in a fire during a training exercise in an oxygen-rich isolation chamber. It's not clear whether other cosmonauts were told of his death; the media didn't learn of Bondarenko's death - or even of his existence - until many years later, in 1986.

Mission

Korabl-Sputnik 5 was launched at 05:54:00 UTC on 25 March 1961, atop a Vostok-K carrier rocket flying from Site 1/5 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome. It was successfully placed into low Earth orbit. As planned, the spacecraft completed a single orbit, and then reentered the atmosphere over the Soviet Union; the total flight time was approximately that of other single-orbit missions, so about 105 minutes. During the descent, the mannequin was ejected from the spacecraft in a successful test of its ejection seat, and descended separately under its own parachute, as it had done on the previous mission, Korabl-Sputnik 4. It landed at approximately 07:40 UTC, northeast of Izhevsk, near the Bolshesosnovsky District.

Capsule recovery

The landing occurred during a snowstorm, which caused delays in located exactly where touchdown occurred. It was about 24 hours after landed when a recovery team arrived at the site. Local villagers assisted the team to the landing area, with the help of a horse-drawn sled. The recovery team noted that the spacecraft was still hot to touch, 24 hours after landing in five feet of snow. The nearby villages were suspicious of the recovery teams, believing that the mannequin was in fact a person who may have been badly injured.

Legacy

The success of Korabl-Sputnik 5 was the final step required to get approval for a manned mission.

Vostok 3KA-2 was the key in the door for Gagarin's flight

That manned mission, known as Vostok 1, would occur about on April 12, 1961, carrying the world's first space traveller Yuri Gagarin. The spacecraft Gagarin used was a nearly identical model, called Vostok 3KA-3. A major difference between the 3KA-2 and 3KA-3 spacecraft was that 3KA-2 version, like all unmanned Vostok spacecraft, was equipped with a self-destruct system, in the event it reentered the atmosphere over foreign territory.

2011 Auction

The re-entry module of the spacecraft Vostok 3KA-2 was auctioned at Sotheby's on 12 April 2011, the 50th anniversary of Gagarin's spaceflight, Vostok 1. The spacecraft was expected to sell for $2–10 million USD., and was sold for $2,882,500 USD.

References

Korabl-Sputnik 5 Wikipedia