This must be called as “Ghosts of the USSR” as eerie
photographs show Soviet-era space shuttles left to rust in an abandoned desert
hangar in Kazakhstan. Two test shuttles were found inside a derelict Soviet
warehouse near the Cosmodrome Baikonur, 125 miles east of the Aral Sea. The
both were developed as part of Moscow's Buran programme which was shut down in
1993 - but neither of the craft was sent to space. Another vast Energia rocket
was designed to propel the Buran, an unmanned space plane, into orbit. The main
purpose of rocket to compete with Nasa's Saturn V, the super-lift launch
vehicle that supported the Apollo mission to the moon. The Energia weighs in at
a huge 2,400,000kg in spite of being made of super-light metals. The massive
hangar that houses the rocket was actually an assembly complex and, measuring
433ft long by 203ft in height, it is the largest building at the Baikonur
Cosmodrome.
The Russian Alexander Kaunas said, he walked almost 24 miles
through the desert to reach the hangar once a hub of activity but now left
derelict and picture the unused shuttles and rocket. Therefore, just like Nasa's
Space Shuttles, the Buran vehicles had engines located at the back, and two
wings for a controlled landing back on Earth. The Russian model had conspicuous
external similarities to the US Space Shuttle Columbia sparking suggestions
Cold War espionage may have played a part in its development. So, the both US
Space Shuttles and Buran had the same shape and size, the same vertical tail
structures and even alike colors in white with a black trim. A documents of
1990s revealed, the KGB stole the designs for the US shuttle in the 1970s and
1980s enabling the Kremlin to build a carbon copy of the American system.
Documents acquired dealt with airframe designs, materials, flight computer
systems, and propulsion systems. This information allowed Soviet military
industries to save years of scientific research and testing time as well as
millions of rubles as they developed their own very similar space shuttle
vehicle.'
Moreover, development of the Buran programme
started in 1976, with the recyclable spacecraft capable of performing
operations in orbit before returning to Earth. But after one unmanned
spaceflight of the Orbiter 1K1 in 1988, the scheme was scrapped following the
dissolution of the USSR in 1993. Orbiter 1K1 was crushed and destroyed in the
same complex - but in a different hangar - in 2002. The collapse killed eight
workers. The rocket Kaunas was to act as a heavy-lift launch system and booster
for the Buran spaceplane. Thus, it has
been left abandoned in the disused hanger since 1991.
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