Manned Spaceflights and Buran Analogue Flights - 1986

Last Year Manned Spaceflight Chronology Index Next Year

Flight Launch Landing Name Country   Parameters
Buran Analogue
Flight 2
January 3, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Rimantas Stankyavichus
(7th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Speed: 520 kph
Altitude: 3000 m
Test Pilot: Igor Volk
(7th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
36 minutes

STS-61C January 12, 1986
(11:55 GMT)
January 18, 1986
(13:58 GMT)
Commander: Robert Gibson
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Perigee: 392 km
Apogee: 392 km
Inclination: 28.5°
98 orbits
Pilot: Charles Bolden
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: George Nelson
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M
Mission Specialist 2: Steven Hawley
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M
Mission Specialist 3: Franklin Chang-Diaz
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Space Shuttle
Columbia
(OV-102)
(7th Mission)
Launch Pad 39A
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida
18th landing at
Edwards Air Force Base,
California (Runway 22)
Payload Specialist 1: Congressman Bill Nelson
(1st Flight) (Congress Observer)
USA M Time
6 days
2 hours
3 minutes
Payload Specialist 2: Robert Cenker
(1st Flight) (RCA Astro Electronics)
USA M
Backup Payload Specialist 2: Gerard Magilton USA M

STS-51L January 28, 1986
(16:38 GMT)
Commander: Francis Scobee
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M Altitude: 14 km
Pilot: Michael Smith
(1st Flight) (NASA Group 9)
USA M
Mission Specialist 1: Ellison Onizuka
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M
Mission Specialist 2: Judith Resnik
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA F
Mission Specialist 3: Ronald McNair
(2nd Flight) (NASA Group 8)
USA M
Space Shuttle
Challenger
(OV-099)
(10th and Final Mission)
Launch Pad 39B
Kennedy Space Center, Florida
Payload Specialist 1: Gregory Jarvis
(1st Flight) (Hughes Communications)
USA M The crew cabin crashed into the Atlantic Ocean 207 seconds after liftoff.
Payload Specialist 2: Sharon Christa McAuliffe
(1st Flight) (Teacher in Space)
USA F
The crew and shuttle were lost 73 seconds after liftoff. Backup Payload Specialist 1: Louis Butterworth USA M
Backup Payload Specialist 2: Barbara Morgan USA F

Mir Core Module
(17KS #127-01)
February 20, 1986
(21:28 GMT)
March 23, 2001
(05:59 GMT)
Mir Core Module
(DOS 7 space station)
USSR   Perigee: 178 km
Apogee: 319 km
Inclination: 51.6°
86,330 orbits
Launch Vehicle
Proton-K #337-01
Site-200L (Launch Pad 39)
Baikonur Cosmodrome
Time
5,510 days
8 hours

Soyuz T-15
(7K-ST #21L)
March 13, 1986
(12:33 GMT)
July 16, 1986
(12:34 GMT)
Commander: Leonid Kizim
(3rd Flight) (TsPK Detachment - Group 3)
USSR M Perigee: 240 km
Apogee: 298 km
Inclination: 51.6°
1,980 orbits
2 spacewalks
Flight Engineer: Vladimir Soloviyov
(2nd Flight) (NPOE Detachment - Group 4)
USSR M
Site-1 (Launch Pad 5)
Baikonur Cosmodrome
55 km NE of Arkalyk
(51° N, 68° E)
1st Backup Crew: Aleksandr Viktorenko USSR M
Docked with Mir
March 15, 1986

(13:38 GMT) (Forward Port)
Transfer to Salyut 7
May 5, 1986

(12:12 GMT) (Forward Port)
1st Backup Crew: Aleksandr Pavlovich Aleksandrov USSR M
Docked with Salyut 7
May 6, 1986

(16:57 GMT) (Aft Port)
Transfer back to Mir
June 25, 1986

(14:58 GM) (Aft Port)
2nd Backup Crew: Anatoli Soloviyov USSR M Time
125 days
0 hours
Launch Vehicle
Soyuz-U2 #012
Docked with Mir
June 26, 1986

(19:46 GMT) (Forward Port)
Undocked from Mir
July 16, 1986

(09:09 GMT) (Forward Port)
2nd Backup Crew: Aleksandr Serebrov USSR M

Buran Analogue
Taxi Test 6
April 26, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Anatoli Levchenko
(1st Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
14 minutes
Test Pilot: Aleksandr Shchukin
(1st Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M

Buran Analogue
Flight 3
May 27, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Rimantas Stankyavichus
(8th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Speed: 540 kph
Altitude: 4000 m
Test Pilot: Igor Volk
(8th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
23 minutes

Buran Analogue
Flight 4
June 11, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Rimantas Stankyavichus
(9th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Speed: 530 kph
Altitude: 4000 m
Test Pilot: Igor Volk
(9th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
22 minutes

Buran Analogue
Flight 5
June 20, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Anatoli Levchenko
(2nd Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
25 minutes
Test Pilot: Aleksandr Shchukin
(2nd Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M

Buran Analogue
Flight 6
June 28, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Anatoli Levchenko
(3rd Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
23 minutes
Test Pilot: Aleksandr Shchukin
(3rd Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M

Buran Analogue
Flight 7
December 10, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Rimantas Stankyavichus
(10th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Automatic Landing
Altitude: 4000 m
Test Pilot: Igor Volk
(10th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
24 minutes

Buran Analogue
Flight 8
December 23, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Rimantas Stankyavichus
(11th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Altitude: 4000 m
Test Pilot: Igor Volk
(11th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
17 minutes

Buran Analogue
Flight 9
December 29, 1986
Baikonur Cosmodrome, Soviet Union
Test Pilot: Anatoli Levchenko
(4th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M Time
17 minutes
Test Pilot: Aleksandr Shchukin
(4th Buran Analogue Flight) (LII Detachment - Group 1)
USSR M

Last Year Manned Spaceflight Chronology Index Next Year

Updated - July 12, 2008