Buran
Buran
Buran
Buran programme
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the Soviet/Russian reusable space programme. For the orbiter launched in
1988 see Buran (spacecraft). For other uses, see Buran (disambiguation).
Buran-class shuttle
Function
Manufacturer
RKK Energia
Size
Mass
Capacity
Payload toLEO
Launch history
Status
Launch sites
Baikonur Cosmodrome
Total launches
1 (1K1)
Successes
Failures
First flight
Last flight
Engines
1 RD-170 (4 nozzles)
Thrust
Specific impulse
Fuel
RP-1/LOX
Core stage
Engines
4 RD-0120
Thrust
Specific impulse
Burn time
480-500 s
Fuel
LH2/LOX
The Buran (Russian: , IPA: [bran], Snowstorm or Blizzard) programme, also known as
the VKK Space Orbiter (Russian: , Air Space Ship)
programme,[3] was a Soviet and later Russian reusable spacecraft project that began in 1974 at
the Central Aerohydrodynamic Institute and was formally suspended in 1993.[4] In addition to
being the designation for the whole Soviet/Russian reusable spacecraft project, Buran was also
the name given to Orbiter K1, which completed one unmanned spaceflight in 1988 and remains
the only Soviet reusable spacecraft to be launched into space. The Buran-class space shuttle
orbiters used the expendable Energia rocket as a launch vehicle. They are generally treated as a
Soviet equivalent of the United States' Space Shuttle but in the Buran project, only the airplaneshaped orbiter itself was theoretically reusable, and while Orbiter K1 was recovered successfully
after its first orbital flight in 1988, it was never reused.
The Buran programme was started by the Soviet Union as a response to the United States Space
Shuttle program.[5] The project was the largest and the most expensive in the history of
Soviet space exploration.[4] Development work included sending BOR-5 test vehicles on multiple
sub-orbital test flights, and atmospheric flights of the OK-GLI aerodynamic prototype. Buran
completed one unmanned orbital spaceflight in 1988 before its cancellation in 1993.[4] Orbiter K1,
which flew the test flight in 1988 was crushed in a hangar collapse on 12 May 2002 in
Kazakhstan. The OK-GLI resides in Technikmuseum Speyer. Although Soviet/Russian Buran
spacecraft was similar in appearance to NASA's Space Shuttle, and could similarly operate as a
re-entry spaceplane, its internal and functional design was distinct. For example, the main
engines during launch were on the Energia rocket and were not taken into orbit by the spacecraft.
Smaller rocket engines on the craft's body provided propulsion in orbit and de-orbital burns.
Contents
[hide]
1Introduction
Introduction[edit]
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The Buran orbital vehicle programme was developed in response to the U.S. Space Shuttle
programme, which in the 1980s raised considerable concerns among the Soviet military and
especially Defense Minister Dmitriy Ustinov. An authoritative chronicler of the Soviet and later
Russian space programmes, the academic Boris Chertok, recounts how the programme came
into being.[6][full citation needed] According to Chertok, after the U.S. developed its Space Shuttle
programme, the Soviet military became suspicious that it could be used for military purposes, due
to its enormous payload, several times that of previous U.S. launch vehicles. The Soviet
government asked the TsNIIMash (, Central Institute of Machine-building, a major
player in defense analysis) for an expert opinion. Institute director, Yuri Mozzhorin, recalls that for
a long time the institute could not envisage a civilian payload large enough to require a vehicle of
that capacity.[citation needed]
Officially, the Buran orbital vehicle was designed for the delivery to orbit and return to Earth of
spacecraft, cosmonauts, and supplies. Both Chertok and Gleb Lozino-Lozinskiy (Chief Designer
of RKK Energia) suggest that from the beginning, the programme was military in nature; however,
the exact military capabilities, or intended capabilities, of the Buran programme remain classified.
Commenting on the discontinuation of the programme in his interview to New Scientist,
Russian cosmonautOleg Kotov confirms their accounts:
We had no civilian tasks for Buran and the military ones were no longer needed. It was originally
designed as a military system for weapon delivery, maybe even nuclear weapons. The American
shuttle also has military uses.[7]
Like its American counterpart, the Buran orbital vehicle, when in transit from its landing sites back
to the launch complex, was transported on the back of a large jet aeroplane the Antonov An225 Mriya transport aircraft, which was designed in part for this task and remains the largest
aircraft in the world to fly multiple times.[8][full citation needed]. Before the Mriya was ready (after
the Buran had flown), the Myasishchev VM-T Atlant, a variant on the Soviet Myasishchev M4 Molot(Hammer) bomber (NATO code: Bison), fulfilled the same role.
Programme development[edit]
The development of the Buran began in the early 1970s as a response to the U.S. Space Shuttle
program. Soviet officials were concerned about a perceived military threat posed by the U.S.
Space Shuttle. In their opinion, the Shuttle's 30-ton payload-to-orbit capacity and, more
significantly, its 15-ton payload return capacity, were a clear indication that one of its main
objectives would be to place massive experimental laser weapons into orbit that could destroy
enemy missiles from a distance of several thousands of kilometers. Their reasoning was that
such weapons could only be effectively tested in actual space conditions and that to cut their
development time and save costs it would be necessary to regularly bring them back to Earth for
modifications and fine-tuning.[9] Soviet officials were also concerned that the U.S. Space Shuttle
could make a sudden dive into the atmosphere to drop bombs on Moscow.[10]
Soviet engineers were initially reluctant to design a spacecraft that looked superficially identical to
the Shuttle, but subsequent wind tunnel testing showed that NASA's design was already
ideal.[11] Even though the Molniya Scientific Production Association proposed its Spiral
programme design (halted 13 years earlier), it was rejected as being altogether dissimilar from
the American shuttle design. While NPO Molniyaconducted development under the lead of Gleb
Lozino-Lozinskiy, the Soviet Union's Military-Industrial Commission, or VPK, was tasked with
collecting all data it could on the U.S. Space Shuttle. Under the auspices of the KGB, the VPK
was able to amass documentation on the American shuttle's airframe designs, design analysis
software, materials, flight computer systems and propulsion systems. The KGB targeted many
university research project documents and databases, including Caltech, MIT, Princeton,
Stanford and others. The thoroughness of the acquisition of data was made much easier as the
U.S. shuttle development was unclassified.[12]
The construction of the shuttles began in 1980, and by 1984 the first full-scale Buran was rolled
out. The first suborbital test flight of a scale-model (BOR-5) took place as early as July 1983. As
the project progressed, five additional scale-model flights were performed. A test vehicle was
constructed with four jet engines mounted at the rear; this vehicle is usually referred to as OKGLI, or as the "Buran aerodynamic analogue". The jets were used to take off from a normal
landing strip, and once it reached a designated point, the engines were cut and OK-GLI glided
back to land. This provided invaluable information about the handling characteristics of the Buran
design, and significantly differed from the carrier plane/air drop method used by the United States
and the Enterprise test craft. Twenty-four test flights of OK-GLI were performed after which the
shuttle was "worn out". The developers considered using a couple of Mil Mi-26 helicopters to
"bundle" lift the Buran, but test flights with a mock-up showed how risky and impractical that
was.[13] TheVM-T ferried components[14] and the Antonov An-225 Mriya (the heaviest airplane
ever) was designed and used to ferry the shuttle.[15][16]
The flight and ground-testing software also required research. In 1983 the Buran developers
estimated that the software development would require several thousand programmers if done
with their existing methodology (in assembly language), and they appealed to Keldysh Institute of
Applied Mathematics for assistance. It was decided to develop a new high-level "problemoriented" programming language. Researchers at Keldysh developed two languages: PROL2
(used for real-time programming of onboard systems) and DIPOL (used for the ground-based test
systems), as well as the development and debugging environment SAPO PROLOGUE.[17] There
was also an operating system known as Prolog Manager.[18] Work on these languages continued
beyond the end of the Buran project, with PROL2 being extended into SIPROL,[19] and eventually
all three languages developed into DRAKON which is still in use in the Russian space industry. A
declassified May 1990 CIA report citing open-source intelligence material states that the software
for the Buran spacecraft was written in "the French-developed programming language known
as Prolog",[20] possibly due to confusion with the name PROLOGUE.
Buran mission again without spaceflight experience. A Soyuz spaceflight for another potential
back-up commander was sought by the Gromov Flight Research Institute, but never occurred.[9]
Ground facilities[edit]
Maintenance, launches and landings of the Buran-class orbiters were to take place at
the Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh S.S.R. Several facilities at Baikonur were adapted or
newly built for these purposes:
Site 110 Used for the launch of the Buran-class orbiters. Like
the assembly and processing hall at Site 112, the launch
complex was originally constructed for the Soviet lunar landing
programme and later converted for the Energia-Buran
programme.
Site 112 Used for orbiter maintenance and to mate the
orbiters to their Energia launchers (thus fulfilling a role similar to
the VAB at KSC). The main hangar at the site, called MIK
RN or MIK 112, was originally built for the assembly of the N1
moon rocket. After cancellation of the N-1 programme in 1974,
the facilities at Site 112 were converted for the Energia-Buran
programme. It was here that Orbiter K1 was stored after the end
of the Buran programme and was destroyed when the hangar
roof collapsed in 2002.[23][24]
Site 251 Used as Buran orbiter landing facility, also known
as Yubileyniy Airfield (and fulfilling a role similar to
the SLF at KSC). It features one runway, called 06/24, which is
4,500 metres (4,900 yd) long and 84 metres (92 yd) wide, paved
with "Grade 600" high quality reinforced concrete. At the edge of
the runway was a special mating-demating device, designed to
lift an orbiter off its Antonov An-225 Mriya carrier aircraft and
load it on a transporter, which would carry the orbiter to the
processing building at Site 254. A purpose-built orbiter landing
control facility, housed in a large multi-storey office building, was
located near the runway. Yubileyniy Airfield was also used to
receive heavy transport planes carrying elements of the EnergiaBuran system. After the end of the Buran programme, Site 251
was abandoned but later reopened as a commercial cargo
airport. Besides serving Baikonur, Kazakh authorities also use it
for passenger and charter flights from Russia.[25][26]
Site 254 Built to service the Buran-class orbiters between
flights (thus fulfilling a role similar to the OPF at KSC).
Constructed in the 1980s as a special four-bay building, it also
featured a large processing area flanked by several floors of test
rooms. After cancellation of the Buran programme it was
adapted for pre-launch operations of
the Soyuz and Progress spacecraft.[27]
Missions[edit]
Following a series of atmospheric test flights using the jet-powered OK-GLI prototype, the first
operational spacecraft (Orbiter K1) flew one test mission on 15 November 1988 at 03:00:02
UTC.[28] The spacecraft was launched unmanned from and landed at Baikonur Cosmodrome in
the Kazakh S.S.R. and flew two orbits, travelling 83,707 kilometres (52,013 mi) in 3 hours and 25
minutes (0.14 flight days).[29] Buran never flew again; the programme was cancelled shortly after
the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[30] In 2002, the collapse of the hangar in which it was stored
destroyed the Buran orbiter.[31][32]
Atmospheric test flights[edit]
An aerodynamic testbed, OK-GLI, was constructed in 1984 to test the in-flight properties of the
Buran design. Unlike the American prototype Space Shuttle Enterprise, OK-GLI had four AL31 turbofan engines fitted, meaning it was able to fly under its own power.
Flight date
Mission
Duration
Landing
Site
Shuttle
Crew
10 November
1985
OKGLI
00d 00h
12m
Baikonur
3 January 1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
36m
Baikonur
27 May 1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
23m
Baikonur
11 June 1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
22m
Baikonur
20 June 1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
25m
Baikonur
28 June 1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
23m
Baikonur
10 December
1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
24m
Baikonur
23 December
1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
17m
Baikonur
29 December
1986
OKGLI
00d 00h
17m
Baikonur
16 February
1987
OKGLI
00d 00h
28m
Baikonur
21 May 1987
OKGLI
00d 00h
20m
Baikonur
Notes
Sources
[33]
First automatic
landing
25 June 1987
OKGLI
00d 00h
19m
Baikonur
5 October 1987
OKGLI
00d 00h
21m
Baikonur
15 October 1987
OKGLI
00d 00h
19m
Baikonur
16 January 1988
OKGLI
Baikonur
24 January 1987
OKGLI
Baikonur
23 February
1988
OKGLI
00d 00h
22m
Baikonur
4 March 1988
OKGLI
00d 00h
32m
Baikonur
12 March 1988
OKGLI
Baikonur
23 March 1988
OKGLI
Baikonur
28 March 1988
OKGLI
Baikonur
2 April 1988
OKGLI
8 April 1988
OKGLI
15 April 1988
OKGLI
00d 00h
20m
Baikonur
Baikonur
00d 00h
19m
Baikonur
15 November
1988
Mission
Orbiter
EnergiaBuran
Crew Duration
K1 Buran 0
00d 03h
0025m
Launch Landing
Site
Site
110/37
Notes
Only
Baikonur flight
of Buran
Sources
[34]
The only orbital launch of the Orbiter K1 Buran (also known as ""OK-1K1" or "Shuttle 1.01") was
at 3:00 UTC on 15 November 1988 from pad 110/37 in Baikonur. The unmanned craft was lifted
into orbit by the specially designed Energia booster rocket. The life support system was not
installed and no software was installed on the CRT displays.[2] The shuttle orbited the Earth twice
in 206 minutes of flight. On its return, it performed an automated landing on the shuttle runway
at Baikonur Cosmodrome.[35]
Planned flights[edit]
The planned flights for the shuttles in 1989, before the downsizing of the project and eventual
cancellation, were:[36]
The planned unmanned second flight of Ptichka was changed in 1991 to the following:
Amusement rides and Buran shuttle test vehicle OK-7M/OK-TVA at Gorky Park in Moscow.
After the first flight of a Buran shuttle, the project was suspended due to lack of funds and the
political situation in the Soviet Union. The two subsequent orbiters, which were due in 1990
(informally Ptichka) and 1992 (informally Baikal) were never completed. The project was officially
terminated on 30 June 1993, by President Boris Yeltsin. At the time of its cancellation, 20
billion rubles (roughly US$71,534,000)[citation needed] had been spent on the Buran programme.[37]
The programme was designed to boost national pride, carry out research, and meet technological
objectives similar to those of the U.S. Space Shuttle programme, including resupply of
the Mir space station, which was launched in 1986 and remained in service until 2001. When Mir
was finally visited by a space shuttle, the visitor was a U.S. Shuttle, not Buran.
The Buran SO, a docking module that was to be used for rendezvous with the Mir space station,
was refitted for use with the U.S. Space Shuttles during the Shuttle-Mirmissions.[38]
Baikonur hangar collapse[edit]
On 12 May 2002, a hangar roof at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan collapsed because
of a structural failure due to poor maintenance. The collapse killed 7 workers and destroyed one
of the Buran craft (Orbiter K1), as well as a mock-up of an Energia booster rocket. It was not clear
to outsiders at the time which Buran programme craft was destroyed, and the BBC reported that it
was just "a model" of the orbiter.[32]It occurred at the MIK RN/MIK 112 building at Site 112 of
the Baikonur Cosmodrome, 14 years after the first and only Buran flight. Work on the roof had
begun for a maintenance project, whose equipment is thought to have contributed to the collapse.
Also, preceding 12 May there had been several days of heavy rain.[9]
Most of the geo-location below show the shuttle bodies on the ground; in some cases Google
Earth's History facility is required to see the shuttle within the dates specified.[39][40]
Name
Buran
OK-1K1
OK 1.01
GRAU i
ndex
11F35
Function
Location
First flight
article,
Launch pad
first
110/37 (L)
shuttle
atBaikonur
series
Image
[1] 1988
Geo-location
45.96486N
63.30496E S
huttle not
visible; no
available
Approxi
mate
dates
15
Novembe
r 1988
Notes
Built in 1986,
only
flightworthy
orbiter.
Launched on
an unmanned,
remote
K1
satellite
photos.
controlled
flight; two
orbits and
landing (with
heavy
crosswinds
and a selfinitiated
approach
direction
change) at
Yubileiniy
(Jubilee)
Airport,
Baikonur.
1989
MIK building,
Baikonur
Cosmodrome,
Kazakhstan
Ptichka
OK-1K2
OK 1.02
GRAU i
ndex
11F35
K2
Baikal
OK-2K1
OK 2.01
Second
flight
article,
first
series, 9597%
complete
MIK building,
Baikonur
Cosmodrome,
Kazakhstan
MZK building
80, area 112a,
Baikonur
Inside Tushino
First flight
Plant, Moscow,
article,
Russia
second
[2] 2002
[3]
[4] 2014
45.92836N
63.29809E S
huttle not
visible;
shadows.
45.92836N
63.29809E S
huttle not
visible, in
building.
45.94046N
63.31841E S
huttle not
visible; in
building.
1988 to
present
Housed in
MIK building
in area 112,
Baikonur
with
an Energiabo
oster mockup
and other
Energia
hardware,
destroyed in a
roof collapse
on 12 May
2002, which
killed eight
workers.
1988 to
2002
Built in 1988,
housed
adjacent to
the Buran.
2002 to
present
Moved to the
MZK after
the roof
collapse in
the MIK.
1991 to
2006
Built 1991.
GRAU i
ndex
11F35
K3
series, 3050%
complete
Car park on
Kimki
Reservoir, near
plant.
[5] 2007
Ramenskoye
Airport, near
Moscow,
Russia
2011
55.84136N
37.46625E
Need history.
on 15 August
2011
55.5631N
38.14716E;
use history.
2006 to
2011
2011 to
2014, to
present?
Moved
outdoors.
An exhibit in
the MAKS2011 and later
air
shows.Ramen
skoye
Airport is the
site of
the Gromov
Flight
Research
Institute, and
has become a
large outdoor
flight
museum.
Other
sightings:
on 15 March
2012:
55.56565N
38.14491E,
on 31 July
2012 and 8
May 2013
55.56309N
38.14714E,
on 4 June and
29 July
2014
55.55179N
38.14463E.
OK-2K2
OK 2.02
GRAU i
ndex
11F35
K4
Second
flight
article,
second
series, 1020%
complete.
OK-2K3
OK 2.03
GRAU i
ndex
Third
flight
article,
second
Tushino plant,
Moscow,
Russia
1991
present
[6]
Scattered.
1988 to
present
Build started
1991, some
pieces of
3K2, like heat
tiles, have
found their
way onto
eBay.[41]
11F35
K5
series,
very small
amount
assembled
Outdoor pad,
area 112,
Baikonur
Cosmodrome,
Kazakhstan
OK-1M
OK-M
OK-ML1
Airframe
and shake
test bed
article
[7]
Gagarin
Museum,
Baikonur
Cosmodrome,
Kazakhstan
45.91963N
63.30996E
Use history.
45.90963N
63.31789E
1988 to
January,
2007
Built in 1982,
deteriorated
considerably
outdoors on
pad.
January
2007 to
present
Refurbished
in 2007, now
on outdoor
display.
2007
OK-2M
OK-GLI
Atmosphe
ric test
article,
two extra
jet
engines in
rear to
facilitate
take-off.
Built in 1984,
used in 25
test flights.
On display at
MAKS-1999,
Russia's most
prestigious
airshow.
Ramenskoye
Airport,
Moscow
55.5631N
38.14716E
1999
No history
available this
far back.
Pyrmont
Island, Sydney
harbor,
Australia
[8] 2000
2002
Manama
harbor, Bahrain
26.19826N
50.60243E
July 2004
to 2007
Stored
outdoors in
Bahrain while
the ownership
of the shuttle
Use history.
49.31185N
8.44628E Sh
uttle not
visible; in
building.
Technik
Museum,
Speyer,
Germany[42]
was legally
contended.
2008 to
present
Purchased
from the
Russian space
agency when
it won the
legal battle,
displayed
indoors.
2006 to
15
October
2012
Built in 1982.
Stored inside.
15
October
2012 to
present
Stored
outside 15
October 2012
to be placed
on permanent
display.[43]
1988 to
present
Built in 1983.
Destroyed,
parts used
for OKTVA.[44]
2008
OK-3M
OK-KS
Electrical
test
article.
Checkout and
Test Building
(KIS), RKK
Energia Plant,
Korolev,
Russia
[9]
Grounds of the
RKK Energia
Plant
MZK building,
Baikonur
Cosmodrome,
Kazakhstan
55.92132N
37.79929E
Not visible,
in building.
This is a halfscale
memorial.
55.91685N
37.79937E
45.94046N
63.31841E S
huttle not
visible; in
building.
OK-4M
OK-MT
OK-ML2
Engineeri
ng
mockup
OK-5M
Environm
ental test
parts from
forward
fuselage
Unknown
1988 to
present
OK-6M
OK-TVI
Environm
ental test
article
NIIKhimMas
h rocket test
area, near
Moscow,
Russia
1988 to
present
[10]
[11] 2014
[12]
Gorky Park,
Moscow,
Russia
55.72876N
37.59688E
Use history.
1995 to
July 2014
Served as a
not-aspopular-asexpected
attraction, a
small
restaurant,
and bicycle
storage.
July 2014
to present
Moved to
VDNKh on 5
July 2014,
assembled by
21 July.[45]The
shuttle
acquisition is
part of
VDNKh
refurbishment
.
2010
OK-7M Structural
OK-TVA test article
OK-8M
Unname
d
Compone
nts used
for static
thermal
and
vacuum
tests.
Outside
Pavilion 20
about 250
meters south of
the Vostok
rocket, VDNK
h/VVT (AllRussia
Exhibition
Center)
Outdoor
display at
Clinical
Hospital 83
FMBA on
Orekhovy
Boulevard in
Moscow.
Wooden
wind
tunnel
model, 1/3
scale.
55.83219N
37.62291E
Use history.
2014
55.618N
37.76448E
2012 (at
least) to
present
2012
Has been
destroyed.
Photographed
at Zhukovsky
Airfield.
2013[citation needed]
Image
Name
Construction
Date
Usage
Current status[46]
BOR-4
BOR5 ("Kosmos")
19821984
Sub-scale model of
the Spiral space
plane
19831988
Suborbital test of
1/8 scale model of
Buran
5 launches, none
were reflown but at
least 4 were
recovered. NPO
Molniya, Moscow.
Full-scale crew
section
Medical-biological
tests
GLI Horizontal
Flight
Simulator
Flight control
software fine
tuning
Wind tunnel
models
Gas dynamics
models
85 models built
On the 25th anniversary of the Buran flight in November 2013, Oleg Ostapenko, the new head
of Roscosmos, the Russian Federal Space Agency, proposed that a new heavy lift launch
vehicle be built for the Russian space program. The rocket would be intended to place a payload
of 100 tonnes (220,000 lb) in a baseline low Earth orbit and is projected to be based on
the Angara launch vehicle technology.[53]
Recently[when?] there have been new interests in renewing the programme temporarily while Russia
struggles with the CSTS and Kliper design stages.[54]
Technical description[edit]
Specifications[edit]
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please
help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2011) (Learn how
and when to remove this template message)
The Buran orbiter ranks among theworld's first spaceplanes, with the North American X-15, the Space
Shuttle,SpaceShipOne, and the Boeing X-37. Of these, only the Buran and X37spaceflights were unmanned.
Mass breakdown
Dimensions
Propulsion
Unlike the US Space Shuttle, which was propelled by a combination of solid boosters and the
shuttle orbiter's own liquid-fuel engines fueled from a large fuel tank, the Soviet/Russian shuttle
system used thrust from the rocket's four RD-170 liquid oxygen/kerosene engines developed
by Valentin Glushko and another four RD-0120 liquid oxygen/liquid hydrogen engines.[citation needed]
Because Buran's debut followed that of Space Shuttle Columbia's, and because there were
striking visual similarities between the two shuttle systemsa state of affairs which recalled the
similarity between the Tupolev Tu-144 and Concorde supersonic airlinersmany speculated
that Cold War espionage played a role in the development of the Soviet shuttle. Despite
remarkable external similarities, many key differences existed, which suggests that, had
espionage been a factor in Buran's development, it would likely have been in the form of external
photography or early airframe designs. One CIA commenter states that Buran was based on a
rejected NASA design.[55]
Key differences between Buran and NASA's Space Shuttle[edit]
See also[edit]
MAKS (spacecraft)
Manned space missions
Unmanned space missions
Space exploration
Space accidents and incidents
Space Shuttle program (United States)
N1 (rocket)
References[edit]
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
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project". Space Daily. 2013-11-19. Retrieved 2013-1213.Buran could stay in orbit for 30 days, while the American shuttle
had a 15-day time limit. It could deliver into orbit 30 tonnes of
cargo, compared to the US shuttle's 24 tonnes of cargo. It could
carry a crew of 10 cosmonauts, while the American shuttle could
carry seven astronauts. Preparation for the Energia/Buran launch
at Baikonur Cosmodrome only took 15 days. However, it took one
month of preparations before the US shuttle was launched from
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space platform into intermediate orbit, 110 kilometers above the
earth's surface. But the most important difference from the
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flight and landing in totally automatic mode, which it brilliantly
demonstrated on November 15, 1988. Buran's American
counterpart used to land with switched-off engines, meaning it
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take several tries if needed. When Buran approached Baikonur
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too strong side winds and the robotic system sent the huge
machine for another rectangular traffic pattern approach,
successfully landing the spacecraft on a second try.
The Buran shuttle was designed to perform 100 flights to space,
while its engines were ready to do 66 flights without replacement.
During its flight, it lost just eight of its unique thermal-insulation tiles
out of 38,800.
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