Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Salyut_1> ?p ?o }
- Salyut_1 length "20000.0".
- Salyut_1 mass "18425.0".
- Salyut_1 mass "18425.232".
- Salyut_1 width "4000.0".
- Salyut_1 volume "99.0".
- Salyut_1 abstract "Salyut 1 (DOS-1) (Russian: Салют-1; English translation: Salute 1) was the first space station of any kind, launched by the Soviet Union on April 19, 1971. More stations followed in the Salyut program, and heritage of that space station program is still in use on the ISS.Salyut 1 originated as a modification of the military Almaz space station program then in development. After the landing of Apollo 11 on the Moon in July 1969, the Soviets began shifting the primary emphasis of their manned space program to orbiting space stations, with a possible lunar landing later in the 1970s if the N-1 booster became flight-worthy (which it didn't). One other motivation for the space station program was a desire to one-up the US Skylab program then in development. The basic structure of Salyut 1 was adapted from the Almaz with a few modifications and would form the basis of all Soviet space stations through Mir.Civilian Soviet space stations were internally referred to as \"DOS\" stations, although publicly, the Salyut name was used for all Almaz and DOS stations. Several military experiments were nonetheless carried on Salyut 1, including the OD-4 optical visual ranger, the Orion ultraviolet instrument for characterizing rocket exhaust plumes, and the highly classified Svinets radiometer.Construction of Salyut 1 began in early 1970 and after nearly a year, it was shipped to the Baikonur Cosmodrome. Some remaining assembly work had yet to be done and this was completed at the launch center.Launch was planned for April 12, 1971 to coincide with the 10th anniversary of Yuri Gagarin's flight on Vostok 1, but technical problems delayed it until the 19th. The first crew launched later in the Soyuz 10 mission, but they ran into troubles while docking and were unable to enter the station; the Soyuz 10 mission was aborted and the crew returned safely to Earth. Its second crew launched in Soyuz 11 and remained on board for 23 days. This was the first time in the history of spaceflight that a space station had been manned, and a new record in time spent in space. This success was, however, overshadowed when the crew was killed during re-entry, as a pressure-equalization valve in the Soyuz 11 re-entry capsule had opened prematurely, causing the crew to suffocate. After this accident, missions were suspended while the Soyuz spacecraft was redesigned. The station was intentionally destroyed by de-orbiting it after six months in orbit, because it ran out of fuel before a redesigned Soyuz spacecraft could be launched to it.".
- Salyut_1 callSign "Salyut 1".
- Salyut_1 length "20.0".
- Salyut_1 mass "1.8425232E7".
- Salyut_1 mass "1.8425E7".
- Salyut_1 nssdcId "1971-032A".
- Salyut_1 thumbnail Salyut_program_insignia.svg?width=300.
- Salyut_1 volume "99.0".
- Salyut_1 width "4.0".
- Salyut_1 wikiPageExternalLink Salyut1.php.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageID "245794".
- Salyut_1 wikiPageLength "13515".
- Salyut_1 wikiPageOutDegree "66".
- Salyut_1 wikiPageRevisionID "705311993".
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Aleksei_Yeliseyev.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Almaz.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Apollo_11.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Armenia.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Atmospheric_entry.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Baikonur_Cosmodrome.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Baikonur_Cosmodrome_Site_81.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Beta_Centauri.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Buffer_chemical_battery.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Byurakan_Observatory.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Category:1971_in_spaceflight.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Category:1971_in_the_Soviet_Union.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Salyut_program.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Spacecraft_launched_in_1971.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Spacecraft_which_reentered_in_1971.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Coordinated_Universal_Time.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Degree_(angle).
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Docking_and_berthing_of_spacecraft.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Electromagnetic_spectrum.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink File:Salyut1_with_docked_Soyuz_spacecraft.jpg.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink File:Salyut_1_departure.jpg.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Georgy_Dobrovolsky.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Grigor_Gurzadyan.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink International_Space_Station.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Life_support_system.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Mir.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Nautical_mile.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Nikolay_Rukavishnikov.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Orbital_decay.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Orion_(spacecraft_instrument).
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Pacific_Ocean.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Pravda.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Proton_(rocket_family).
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Radiator.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Salyut_programme.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Skylab.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Solar_cell.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Soyuz_10.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Soyuz_11.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Soyuz_7K-OKS.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Space_station.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Spectrograph.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Ultraviolet_astronomy.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Vega.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Viktor_Patsayev.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Vladimir_Shatalov.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Vladislav_Volkov.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Vostok_1.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Vostok_programme.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Wadsworth_constant_deviation_system.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Yuri_Gagarin.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink Ångström.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLink File:The_Soviet_Union_1971_CPA_4060_stamp_(Cosmonauts_Georgy_Dobrovolsky,_Vladislav_Volkov_and_Viktor_Patsayev).jpg.
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Salyut 1".
- Salyut_1 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Salyut 1".
- Salyut_1 apogee "222.0".
- Salyut_1 asOf "de-orbit and re-entry".
- Salyut_1 configurationCaption "Soyuz docking with Salyut 1".
- Salyut_1 configurationImage "RP1357 p64 Salyut 1.svg".
- Salyut_1 crew "3".
- Salyut_1 distance "1.18602524E8".
- Salyut_1 inOrbit "1.512E7".
- Salyut_1 inclination "51.6".
- Salyut_1 insignia "Salyut_program_insignia.svg".
- Salyut_1 insigniaSize "160".
- Salyut_1 launch "1971-04-19".
- Salyut_1 launch "6000.0".
- Salyut_1 launchPad Baikonur_Cosmodrome.
- Salyut_1 launchPad Baikonur_Cosmodrome_Site_81.
- Salyut_1 launchPad Soviet_Union.
- Salyut_1 length "1200.0".
- Salyut_1 mass "18425.0".
- Salyut_1 nssdcId "1971".
- Salyut_1 occupied "2073600.0".
- Salyut_1 orbits "2929".
- Salyut_1 perigee "200.0".
- Salyut_1 period "5310.0".
- Salyut_1 reEntry "1971-10-11".
- Salyut_1 sign "Salyut 1".
- Salyut_1 station "Salyut 1".