The Tragedy of Soyuz 1
Ойындар
This Video is Dedicated to Vladimir Mikhaylovich Komarov and all other Astronauts and Cosmonauts who have died in the pursuit of Space Exploration. You will not be forgotten.
Per Aspera, Ad Astra
And I would like to make a special thanks to Anatoly Zak and Russianspaceweb.com
In the space archiving community he is known as THE Russian space reporter and Soviet space archivist and this video would not exist without the well put together information on his website:
www.russianspaceweb.com/
Sources:
www.russianspaceweb.com/
www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/20...
www.npr.org/sections/krulwich...
spacefacts.de/mission/english/...
www.spacesafetymagazine.com/sp...
www.russianspaceweb.com/soyuz1...
/ how-vladimir-komarov-d...
www.astronautix.com/s/soyuz1.html
www.svengrahn.pp.se/histind/So...
www.airspacemag.com/daily-pla...
www.nasa.gov/topics/history/f...
Пікірлер: 26
I love how you portrayed the accident from the ground, it brings a haunting new light to the tragedy
Thank you for telling this story with such grace. RIP Comrade.
Hero of the soyuz programme. He was the first one to go through those mysterious paths, yet those tracks are lost forever. Nobody will ever know the exact details of the flight.
@SupBro-ww9go
2 жыл бұрын
29:22 judging by shape, this may be his remains in the rubble
A tragic end for such a brave man
What parallels between this and the Challenger Shuttle, talking of time being pinched and warnings ignored?
@joeylamuel5828
2 ай бұрын
In other words, shut up, we're going.
Tragic. A brave man who refused to let others go in his place.
For historical context 27 January 1967 the Americans had suffered the loss of the Apollo 1 crew to a fire wile performing a test.
I have seen that photo of the open casket on the internet before, is that really an actual photo of his remains with the officials looking at him or is that just a photo of something else that has been used to act like an actual photo? I have been curious of that for some time now.
@DSTStudios
11 ай бұрын
That is the actual photo
This is such a good video. Please make more like this!
11:42 Some info for teh vid. My uncle, Vlad Mutin, was "Conscript #2" that died during the failed launch. They tried to cover it up by saying he fell out of the 5th story Hospital window.
8:00 This was the purpose of the Sputnik 1 satellite. It had a carefully machined surface so engineers could actuality track it using the beeping radio signal. The Soviets even shared this information with the Americans and it was used in latter missions on both sides.
Vladimir, the son of Michael. The brave cosmonaut. Rest in peace, brave soldier.
Imagine a world in which we were partners and friends with the Russian people for the last 60 years. The technology and commerce we could have shared.
God Bless 💝❤️
The Redstone Rocket, the US's first ICBM and the rocket used to launch the first 2 Americans into space started out as the V-3 the Rocket Hitler intended to use to strike the United States.
9:25 This is not true. The capsule reached the ground but as the parachutes failed to deploy it reached the ground at 300 MPH. There was no destruct devise on the space craft to prevent landings outside Soviet Territories The US navy had plans to recover a Soyuz capsule in case an emergency landing was required at sea, the Soviet Army had planes to recover a US space craft should an emergency landing was required by NASA. Both sides had treaties in place to allow the return of their people to either side.
@DSTStudios
12 күн бұрын
As I am not able to gather primary sources all of my information is taken from books/web pages/ articles. Because these materials may have inaccuracies and sometimes there is only one source talking about a particular event this incorrect information may sometimes slip through my review process. As soviet space history is a much smaller area of research vs American it is much more difficult or sometimes impossible to verify the accuracy of certain pieces of information. Thank you for this info you have provided
Fly high, cosmonaut. Fly high.
Kormorev certainly could have used Vostock's ejection seat. Damn
This man was a martyr. He showed the worked how the negligence of the Soviet union leads to terrible things. May he rest in peace, and I hope that he will never be forgotten as long as humanity reaches for the stars.
@JamaicaWhiteMan
12 күн бұрын
Or, for Challenger and Columbia, it showed how "the negligence of the USA leads to terrible things".
'Mission commander '? He was by himself....