Incarn
ACCESS: Confidential
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On this day 37 years ago, after two attempts, the reusable spacecraft Buran (11F35, product 1.01) was launched in the USSR. After completing two orbits around the Earth, it made a triumphant automatic landing at its landing complex in Baikonur 208 minutes after launch.
Buran was unique in many ways — it was the most complex aircraft in history. Much has been said about this, but much more is still classified and is unlikely to ever be disclosed.
I hope that, little by little, I will be able to lift the veil of secrecy surrounding this project.
To talk about the plans for using the 11F35 spacecraft.
About the objectives of the first ten planned flights.
About the standard weapons on board, including the onboard defence system ‘based on new physical principles’.
About the strategic space systems that it was supposed to service in space.
About the engineering solutions that went with it.
About plans for the further development of Buran, up to the creation of fully reusable versions of the system and launch vehicles with a launch mass of up to 10,000 tonnes...
In the meantime, here is one of my extreme illustrations.
In one of the enthusiastic foreign publications of November 1988, I came across this assessment of the unprecedented flight of Buran, which stuck in my memory:
"There are only three truly epoch-making events in the history of world cosmonautics: the launch of the first Sputnik, Armstrong's landing on the Moon, and the flight of Buran.
Today, we can say that the flight of Buran was the last achievement of Soviet cosmonautics. After that, we have seen many years of decline, which is now turning into agony before our very eyes...
Buran was unique in many ways — it was the most complex aircraft in history. Much has been said about this, but much more is still classified and is unlikely to ever be disclosed.
I hope that, little by little, I will be able to lift the veil of secrecy surrounding this project.
To talk about the plans for using the 11F35 spacecraft.
About the objectives of the first ten planned flights.
About the standard weapons on board, including the onboard defence system ‘based on new physical principles’.
About the strategic space systems that it was supposed to service in space.
About the engineering solutions that went with it.
About plans for the further development of Buran, up to the creation of fully reusable versions of the system and launch vehicles with a launch mass of up to 10,000 tonnes...
In the meantime, here is one of my extreme illustrations.
In one of the enthusiastic foreign publications of November 1988, I came across this assessment of the unprecedented flight of Buran, which stuck in my memory:
"There are only three truly epoch-making events in the history of world cosmonautics: the launch of the first Sputnik, Armstrong's landing on the Moon, and the flight of Buran.
Today, we can say that the flight of Buran was the last achievement of Soviet cosmonautics. After that, we have seen many years of decline, which is now turning into agony before our very eyes...