Blazing Satellites - Guns in Space

From: tlj18@juno.com
Date: Thu Apr 27 2000 - 11:19:21 PDT

  • Next message: Phillip Clark: "Re: Blazing Satellites - Guns in Space"

    Interesting article!
    ---------------------------------------------
    
    Blazing Satellites - Guns in Space
    
    http://www.fourmilab.to/documents/spaceguns/
    
    When the movie Star Wars came out in 1977, remember how many jokes were
    made
    about Luke and Han blazing away at Imperial fighters with the ack-ack
    guns
    on the Millennium Falcon?
    
    In the July 1998 issue of Spaceflight (the popular publication of the
    British Interplanetary Society), there's a article1 about the military
    version of the Soviet Salyut space station, which flew as Salyuts 3 and 5
    between 1974 and 1977. (The name "Salyut" was applied to two entirely
    different space station programs, one military and the other civilian,
    which
    used completely different hardware built by different design bureaux.2
    The
    hardware flown in the Salyut 3 and 5 missions was referred to as Almaz
    (Diamond) within the Soviet space program.)
    
    Virtually no information was available about the military Salyuts until
    recently, when access was opened up to a full-scale training model at the
    Moscow Aviation Institute. Well, guess what--Salyut 3 had a machine gun.
    The
    station had a 23 mm rapid-fire cannon mounted on the outside, along the
    long
    axis of the station "for defense against US space-based
    inspectors/interceptors". Combat engagements would have been leisurely by
    Star Wars or fighter jet standards, since the only way to aim the cannon
    was
    to point the entire station at the target, using its attitude gyros. A
    periscope connected to a visor on the main control panel allowed drawing
    a
    bead on the intended target.
    
    As Professor Newton pointed out some years ago, if you fire a cannon in
    space, you're going to end up going in the opposite direction with some
    haste. While permitting one to avoid a "fight or flight" decision by
    simultaneously exercising both options, it would be disconcerting to
    discover that in the heat of combat you had accidentally deorbited your
    battle station. So, the station was equipped with orbital maneuvering
    engines which automatically fired when the cannon was blazing away to
    cancel
    its recoil thrust.
    
    According to a report in a Russian magazine,3 this lash-up was actually
    tested in space on an unidentified flight, but apparently under ground
    control at a time no cosmonauts were on board the station. Pavel
    Popovich,
    commander of the July 1974 Soyuz 14 flight to Salyut 3, is said to have
    indicated that the cannon was installed on Salyut 3 but "fortunately he
    was
    not forced to use it". A Salyut 5 crew member denies the existence of a
    cannon on that station, so perhaps the wisdom of outfitting a space
    station
    with a cannon was rethought, or maybe, the U.S. having had no manned
    spaceflight capability between 1975 and 1981, low Earth orbit was deemed
    insufficiently target-rich to justify such weaponry.
    The Cold War may be done for, but there are still guns in space, and all
    of
    them are Russian. The survival kit in the Soyuz spacecraft which ferries
    cosmonauts to and from the Mir space station is said to contain, among
    other
    things, a pistol and ammunition. This is not so much to put down the
    occasional space mutiny, but as a precaution in case of an off-course
    landing in a region with dangerous wildlife. In March 1965, due to
    failure
    of the prime retro-rocket system, the crew of Voskhod 2 landed in a
    remote
    region in the Ural Mountains and rescue crews could not reach them until
    the
    next day.2,4 They were forced to retreat to their re-entry capsule to
    escape
    wolves in the forest where they landed.
    
    Now recall that the International Space Station will use docked Soyuz
    spacecraft as the crew's lifeboat. Imagine trying to persuade folks back
    in
    1986, when Ronald Reagan first proposed "Space Station Freedom", that
    when
    it was finally completed in the next millennium its crew complement would
    include Russians--with guns.
    
    Cheers,
    Bill Larson
    Geneva, Switzerland
    
    
    
    
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