Site icon SNN

On This Day In Space: Sept. 29, 1977: Soviet Union launches Salyut 6 space station

On This Day In Space: Sept. 29, 1977: Soviet Union launches Salyut 6 space station_6516f05c84041.jpeg

On Sept. 29, 1977, the Salyut 6 space station launched into orbit. This was the eighth space station the Soviet Union launched under its Salyut program and the first second-generation Salyut space station.

Unlike its predecessors, Salyut 6 was able to accommodate long-duration crewed missions.

Related: Russian and Soviet space stations throughout history

The Salyut 6 space station with docked Progress and Soyuz spacecraft. (Image credit: RKK Energia)

Over the course of its five years in operation, 16 cosmonaut crews visited the station.

The longest anyone stayed there was 185 days. The space station deorbited in 1982 and burned up in Earth’s atmosphere.

On This Day in Space Archive!

Still not enough space? Don’t forget to check out our Space Image of the Day, and on the weekends our Best Space Photos and Top Space News Stories of the week.

Follow us @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 

Exit mobile version