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My universe I live in a universe of angels and demons, astronauts and cosmonauts, brushes with Death, and even brushes with Life. It teaches me a lot of things. Let me share it with you.
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My universe I live in a universe of angels and demons, astronauts and cosmonauts, brushes with Death, and even brushes with Life. It teaches me a lot of things. Let me share it with you.
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Did Soviet cosmonauts die in space in the early 1960s?
Any space buff worth his or her salt is keenly aware of the tragic fate of Vladimir Komarov, who died on April 24, 1967, due to parachute failure after the reentry of Soyuz 1.
But the question really is: were there events like this (or ones even more dramatic) earlier in the Space Race that the Soviet Union chose to hide from us?
As a child I heard a number of stories of amateur radio operators intercepting signals of cosmonauts dying or otherwise meeting some dark fate in their efforts to conquer space. The most dramatic I can recall was of a cosmonaut stranded in orbit, his heartbeat failing as he dies, the cabin depressurizing, and his lifeless body taken from the cabin by unknown means.
(Of course, how an amateur radio operator would be able to tell that last part is way beyond me.)
Tags: Apollo 11, Daniel Brenton, danielbrenton.com, David S. Michaels, James Oberg, Judica Cordiglia, Luna 15, Moon Race, Red Moon, Soyuz 1, space flight, Sven Grahn, Torre Bert, Voskhod, VostokPosted: November 10th, 2007 under Space.
Comments: 2