Soyuz 22 (Russian: Союз 22, Union 22) was a September, 1976, Soviet crewed spaceflight.[2] It was an Earth sciences mission using a modified Soyuz spacecraft, and was also, some observers speculated, a mission to observe NATO exercises near Norway.
![]() Cosmonauts and Soyuz 22, on a 1976 Soviet stamp | |
Mission type | Earth science mission |
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Operator | Soviet space program |
COSPAR ID | 1976-093A ![]() |
SATCAT no. | 09421 |
Mission duration | 7 days 21 hours 52 minutes 17 seconds |
Orbits completed | 127 |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Soyuz 7K |
Spacecraft type | Soyuz 7K-MF6 |
Manufacturer | NPO Energia |
Launch mass | 6570 kg |
Landing mass | 1200 kg |
Crew | |
Crew size | 2 |
Members | Valery Bykovsky Vladimir Aksyonov |
Callsign | Ястреб (Yastreb - "Hawk") |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 15 September 1976, 09:48:30 UTC |
Rocket | Soyuz-U |
Launch site | Baikonur, Site 1/5[1] |
Contractor | NPO Energia |
End of mission | |
Landing date | 23 September 1976, 07:40:47 UTC |
Landing site | 150 km at the northwest of Tselinograd, Kazakhstan |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Low Earth |
Perigee altitude | 250.0 km |
Apogee altitude | 280.0 km |
Inclination | 64.75° |
Period | 89.6 minutes |
![]() Vimpel Diamond patch Soyuz programme |
The spacecraft was a refurbished Soyuz that had served as a backup for the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) mission the previous year.
Cosmonauts Valery Bykovsky and Vladimir Aksyonov spent a week in orbit photographing the surface of the Earth with a specially-built camera.
Position | Cosmonaut | |
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Commander | ![]() Second spaceflight | |
Flight Engineer | ![]() First spaceflight |
Position | Cosmonaut | |
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Commander | ![]() | |
Flight Engineer | ![]() |
Position | Cosmonaut | |
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Commander | ![]() | |
Flight Engineer | ![]() |
Soyuz 22 was launched to orbit 15 September 1976 at the unusually high inclination of 64.75°, not used since the Voskhod program. The orbiting Salyut 5 space station was at the standard 51.7° inclination, which led some observers to conclude that this solo Soyuz mission was chiefly intended to observe NATO's Exercise Teamwork, taking place in Norway, well above 51.0° latitude and therefore outside good visual range of the space station.[3] However, the particular camera used, an MKF-6 multispectral Carl Zeiss camera which allowed six simultaneous photographs to be taken, suggested to others that reconnaissance, if part of the mission, was a minor part of it.[4] Soyuz 22's orbital inclination maximized ground coverage, especially of the former East Germany. There were two orbit changes within 24 hours of launch. The first came on the fourth orbit and changed the orbit to 250 by 280 km (160 by 170 mi). The second, on the sixteenth orbit, circularized the orbit to 251 by 257 km (156 by 160 mi).
The mission's stated objectives were to "check and improve scientific and technical methods and means of studying geological features of the Earth's surface in the interests of the national economies of the Soviet Union and the German Democratic Republic".
The vehicle was the modified ASTP back-up ship. In place of the APAS-75 androgynous docking system, it carried an East German MKF-6 camera, built by Carl Zeiss-Jena MKF-6 multispectral camera.[3] One cosmonaut would control the operations of the camera from inside the Orbital module while the second changed the orientation from the Descent module. The camera had six lenses, four visible light and two infrared, which imaged a preselected 165 km (103 mi)-wide strip of the Earth's surface. This allowed over 500,000 km2 (190,000 sq mi) to be imaged in 10 minutes.
The first test images from the camera were of Baikal-Amur railway that was being constructed. On the third day of the mission the crew took photographs of Siberia to the sea of Okhotsk in the morning and the northwestern USSR. On the fourth day, the crew imaged the Moon rising and setting to investigate the Earth's atmosphere. This also allowed them to see how clean their spacecraft's windows were. They also imaged Central Asia, Kazakhstan, and Siberia, with attention to geological formations and agricultural effects. The fifth day focused on Azerbaijan, the southern Urals, the Baikal-Amur railway again, and Western Siberia. At the same time a second camera was being flown on an aircraft over the same areas in order to compare the images. The sixth day saw images of Siberia, the Northern USSR, and European USSR which were, according to TASS, areas that had never before been "targets of space photography".
The last full day had the crew focus on East Germany, where an Antonov An-30 aircraft was flying carrying an identical camera to the one aboard Soyuz 22.[3] They also re-photographed Central Asia, Kazakhstan, eastern Siberia, and the southwestern USSR in order to compare images with those taken earlier in the mission. One of the tasks the crew undertook was to dismantle the camera in order to remove its color filters needed to calibrate the images back on Earth. The task took them several hours to complete.
The crew also performed several biological experiments. They ran a small centrifuge in the orbital module to see how plants grew in artificial gravity. They also investigated the effects of cosmic rays on human vision. This effect had first been reported by Apollo astronauts who described bright flashes when they closed their eyes. This was due to cosmic rays passing through the eye. Soyuz 22 also carried a small aquarium so that the crew could watch the behavior of fish.
At the end of the mission, the crew took the film cassettes and other items they were returning to Earth and stowed them in the descent module. The retrofire, re-entry, and landing took place without incident on 23 September 1976.[3] The crew had photographed 30 geographic areas in 2400 photographs.[3] None of the cassettes were found to be faulty and all the images were of good quality. The results, it was said, would aid experts in the fields of agriculture, cartography, mineralogy, and hydrology.
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Past missions (by spacecraft type) |
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Future missions |
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Uncrewed missions are designated as Kosmos instead of Soyuz; exceptions are noted "(uncrewed)". The † sign designates failed missions. Italics designates cancelled missions. |
← 1975 · Orbital launches in 1976 · 1977 → | |
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Kosmos 787 | Kosmos 788 | Helios 2 | Hermes | Kosmos 789 | Molniya-1 No.40 | Kosmos 790 | Kosmos 791 · Kosmos 792 · Kosmos 793 · Kosmos 794 · Kosmos 795 · Kosmos 796 · Kosmos 797 · Kosmos 798 | Kosmos 799 | Intelsat IVA F-2 | Kosmos 800 | CORSA-A | Kosmos 801 | Kosmos 802 | Kosmos 803 | Kosmos 804 | OPS 5140 | Marisat 1 | Kosmos 805 | Ume 1 | Kosmos 806 | Molniya-1-33 | Kosmos 807 | LES-8 · LES-9 · Solrad 11A · Solrad 11B | Kosmos 808 | Kosmos 809 | Molniya-1 No.42 | OPS 7600 | Kosmos 810 | Satcom 2 | Kosmos 811 | Kosmos 812 | Meteor No.37 | Kosmos 813 | Kosmos 814 | NATO 3A | Kosmos 815 | Kosmos 816 | OPS 6431 · OPS 6431 SSU-1 · OPS 6431 SSU-2 · OPS 6431 SSU-3 | LAGEOS-1 | Kosmos 817 | Molniya-3 No.16 | Comstar 1A | Meteor-Priroda No.2-1 | Kosmos 818 | Kosmos 819 | Kosmos 820 | Wideband | Kosmos 821 | Kosmos 822 | OPS 7837 | Kosmos 823 | Kosmos 824 | Marisat-3 | Kosmos 825 · Kosmos 826 · Kosmos 827 · Kosmos 828 · Kosmos 829 · Kosmos 830 · Kosmos 831 · Kosmos 832 | Kosmos 833 | Interkosmos 15 | Salyut 5 | Kosmos 834 | OPS 2112 | Kosmos 835 | Kosmos 836 | Kosmos 837 | Kosmos 838 | Soyuz 21 | OPS 4699 · OPS 5366 · OPS 3986 | Kosmos 839 | Palapa A1 | Kosmos 840 | Kosmos 841 | Kosmos 842 | Kosmos 843 | Kosmos 844 | Comstar 1B | Molniya-1 No.43 | Kosmos 845 | Interkosmos 16 | NOAA-5 | Kosmos 846 | Kosmos 847 | OPS 7940 | Luna 24 | Kosmos 848 | Kosmos 849 | Kosmos 850 | Kosmos 851 | Kosmos 852 | Ji Shu Shiyan Weixing 3 | Kosmos 853 | Triad 3 | Kosmos 854 | OPS 5721 | Gran' No.12L | Soyuz 22 | OPS 8533 | Kosmos 855 | Kosmos 856 | Kosmos 857 | Kosmos 858 | Unnamed | Kosmos 859 | Soyuz 23 | Marisat-2 | Meteor No.35 | Kosmos 860 | Kosmos 861 | Kosmos 862 | Kosmos 863 | Ekran No.11L | Kosmos 864 | Kosmos 865 | Kosmos 865 | Unnamed | Kosmos 866 | Kosmos 867 | Prognoz 5 | Kosmos 868 | Kosmos 869 | Kosmos 870 | Molniya-2-16 | Fanhui Shi Weixing 3 | Kosmos 871 · Kosmos 872 · Kosmos 873 · Kosmos 874 · Kosmos 875 · Kosmos 876 · Kosmos 877 · Kosmos 878 | Kosmos 879 | Kosmos 880 | Kosmos 881 · Kosmos 882 | Kosmos 883 | Kosmos 884 | Kosmos 885 | OPS 5705 | Kosmos 886 | Molniya-3 No.17 | Kosmos 887 | |
Payloads are separated by bullets ( · ), launches by pipes ( | ). Crewed flights are indicated in underline. Uncatalogued launch failures are listed in italics. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are denoted in (brackets). |