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Skylab

Skylab.jpg

America's first space station, the 75 ton Skylab was launched May 14, 1973 by a two-stage version of the Saturn V booster (the SL-1 mission). Severe damage was sustained during launch, including the loss of the station's micrometeoroid shield/sun shade and one of its main solar panels. Debris from the lost micrometeroid shield further complicated matters by pinning the remaining solar panel to the side of the station, preventing its deployment and thus leaving the station with a huge power deficit. The station underwent a extensive repair by the first crew launched on May 25, 1973 (the SL-2 mission) atop a Saturn 1B. Two additional missions followed on July 28, 1973 (SL-3) and November 16, 1973 (SL-4) with stay times of 28, 59, and 84 days, respectively. The last Skylab crew returned to Earth on February 8, 1974.

Skylab was actually the refitted S-IVB third stage of a Saturn V booster, a leftover from the Apollo program originally intended for one of the canceled moon landing missions (Apollos 18-20). A product of the Apollo Applications program (a program tasked with finding long-term uses for Apollo program hardware), Skylab was originally planned as a minimially-altered S-IVB to be launched on a Saturn IB rocket. The small size of the IB would have required Skylab to double as a rocket stage during launch, only being retrofitted as a space station once on-orbit. With the cancellation of Apollo missions 18-20 a Saturn V was made available and thus the "Wet Workshop" concept, as it was called, was put aside and Skylab was launched dry and fully outfitted. Skylab's grid flooring system is a highly visable legacy of the wet workshop concept.

Following the last mission the Station was positioned in a parking orbit expected to last at least 8 years. Increased solar activity heating the outer layers of the earth's atmosphere and thereby increasing drag on the Station led to an early reentry on July 11, 1979. Skylab disintegrated over Western Australia and the Indian Ocean, casting large pieces of debris in populated areas (without injury). The reentry prevented any further use by the then unfinished Space Shuttle as was envisioned by some at NASA.

Two flight-quality Skylabs were built, the second, a backup, is on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC.


Skylab is also the name of a research facility located at Earth's South Pole, in the geodesic dome of the United States' South Pole Station.

Referenced By

11 July | 11th July | 14 May | 14th May | 1973 | 1974 | 8 February | 8th February | Apollo Astronauts | Apollo Moon landing | Apollo Program | Apollo mission | Apollo moon landings | Charles Conrad | February 8 | February 8th | International Space Station | James A. Lovell | James Lovell | Jim Lovell | John F. Kennedy Space Center | July 11 | July 11th | Kennedy Space Center | List of astronauts by selection | List of human spaceflights, 1961-1986 | List of human spaceflights by program | May 14 | May 14th | NASA | National Aeronautic and Space Administration | National Aeronautics and Space Administration | National Aeronautics and Space Agency | OV-102 | Pete Conrad | S-IVB | S-IVB (rocket stage) | S-IV (rocket stage) | Salyut | Salyut 6 | Saturn (rocket family) | Saturn V | Saturn V (rocket) | Saturn V rocket | Saturn rocket | Skylab 2 | Space Exploration | Space Shuttle Columbia | Space station | Space stations | Space travel | Spaceflight | Story Musgrave | Timeline of Planetary Exploration | Timeline of United States history (1970-present) | Timeline of artificial satellites and space probes

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Skylab".

 

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