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- Q1093484 subject Q15406107.
- Q1093484 subject Q6569638.
- Q1093484 subject Q7021177.
- Q1093484 subject Q8154931.
- Q1093484 abstract "Kosmos 140 (Russian: Космос 140 meaning Cosmos 140) was an unmanned flight of the Soyuz spacecraft. It was the third attempted test flight of the Soyuz 7K-OK model, after orbital (Kosmos 133) and launch (Soyuz 11A511) failures of the first two Soyuz spacecraft.The followup to Cosmos 133 was planned for 14 December, but ended disastrously. At liftoff, the Blok A core stage of the 11A57 booster ignited, but not the strap-ons. A shutdown command was immediately sent and pad crews began to move the service towers back in place and drain the propellants. This task was completed for the core stage and strap-ons, and then about 30 minutes after the attempted launch, the escape tower suddenly fired. Its exhaust caused the Blok I third stage propellant tanks to overheat and explode, killing one person on the ground and damaging the Soyuz and core stage/strap-ons beyond repair. LC-1 was also badly damaged and took a month of repair work in the frigid Kazakh winter to be restored to use. The reason for the LES firing was thought to be either a timer being activated due to the Earth's rotation affecting the gyroscope package in the launch vehicle or perhaps one of the service towers bumping it.In February 1967, the backup booster and spacecraft were set up at LC-1 and the planned mission could be carried out.The spacecraft suffered attitude control problems and excessive fuel consumption in orbit, but remained controllable. An attempted maneuver on the 22nd orbit still showed problems with the control system. It malfunctioned yet again during retrofire, leading to a steeper than planned ballistic reentry and a 300 mm (12 in) hole being burned in the heat shield.Although the event would have been lethal to any human occupants, the capsule's recovery systems operated and the capsule crashed through the ice of the frozen Aral Sea, hundreds of kilometers short of its landing zone. The spacecraft finally sank in 10 meters of water and had to be retrieved by divers. The test performance was nonetheless deemed "good enough"; the manned docking missions of Soyuz 1 and Soyuz 2 were approved for the next flight.".
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q1064867.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q11423.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q1299641.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q15406107.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q1579577.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q1759904.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q177477.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q1956962.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q211254.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q2580456.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q35883.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q37640.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q4112212.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q531716.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q579421.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q6569638.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q663611.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q7021177.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q763402.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q8154931.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q83001.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q83481.
- Q1093484 wikiPageWikiLink Q970136.
- Q1093484 type Place.
- Q1093484 type ArtificialSatellite.
- Q1093484 type CelestialBody.
- Q1093484 type Location.
- Q1093484 type Place.
- Q1093484 type Satellite.
- Q1093484 type Thing.
- Q1093484 comment "Kosmos 140 (Russian: Космос 140 meaning Cosmos 140) was an unmanned flight of the Soyuz spacecraft. It was the third attempted test flight of the Soyuz 7K-OK model, after orbital (Kosmos 133) and launch (Soyuz 11A511) failures of the first two Soyuz spacecraft.The followup to Cosmos 133 was planned for 14 December, but ended disastrously. At liftoff, the Blok A core stage of the 11A57 booster ignited, but not the strap-ons.".
- Q1093484 label "Kosmos 140".