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On This Day In Space: July 29, 1982: Salyut 6 space station falls to Earth

On July 29, 1982, the Salyut 6 space station fell out of space and safely burned up in Earth’s atmosphere along the way.

Salyut 6 was the eighth space station the Soviet Union had built for its Salyut program. It spent almost five years in orbit and supported five different crewed cosmonaut missions. 

A Soviet stamp featuring an illustration of Salyut 6, the scientific research ship ‘Kosmonavt Vladimir Komarov’ and a world map tracing the paths of Salyut 6 and the Soyuz 29-30 flights.  (Image credit: Public Domain/USSR Post)

While aboard Salyut 6, those cosmonauts made astronomical observations and studied the effects of spaceflight on the human body.

Though the aging space station was still considered fully functional in 1982, a mold problem in the crew quarters led the Soviets to abandon the orbiting lab. They intentionally sent it plunging toward Earth, where it would burn up in the atmosphere before hitting the ground.

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