• 10 months ago
On February 19, 1986, the Soviet Union launched the Mir space station.

While this wasn't the first space station launched into orbit, it was the first one that had to be assembled piece-by-piece in space. Mir enabled the first long-duration human spaceflight missions. The current record for the longest stay in space was set aboard the Mir space station by cosmonaut Valeri Vladimirovich Polyakov, who spent 437 consecutive days in orbit. The Soviets used Mir to do all kinds of scientific research for 15 years before funding for the program was cut, and Mir fell back to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere along the way.
Transcript
00:00 On this day in space.
00:03 On February 19th, 1986, the Soviet Union launched the Mir space station.
00:08 While this wasn't the first space station launched into orbit,
00:11 it was the first one that had to be assembled piece by piece in space.
00:14 Mir enabled the first long-duration human spaceflight missions.
00:17 The current record for the longest day in space was set aboard the Mir space station
00:21 by cosmonaut Valery Vladimirovich Poyakov, who spent 437 consecutive days in orbit.
00:27 The Soviets used Mir to do all kinds of scientific research for 15 years
00:31 before funding for the program was cut and Mir fell back to Earth,
00:34 burning up in the atmosphere along the way.
00:37 And that's what happened on this day in space.
00:40 [ music ]

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