Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Cosmonaut held record for longest stint in space

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Valeri Polyakov, the cosmonaut, who has died aged 80, entered the record books in 1995 after spending 437 days and 18 hours — nearly 14 months — aboard the Mir space station, with more than 7,000 Earth orbits; his trip remains the longest single stay in space.

Polyakov, an expert in space medicine, had volunteere­d for the record-breaking trip in order to understand how the human body responds to long periods of weightless­ness, for such future projects as a possible manned mission to Mars.

Launched on Jan. 8, 1994 aboard a Soyuz rocket, Polyakov carried out scientific experiment­s and research, keeping fit by performing intensive exercises on Mir’s cycling machine. He also took supplement­s to compensate for the calcium deficiency that prolonged space flight causes.

Back on Earth on March 22, 1995 after his Soyuz module touched down in the steppes of Kazakhstan, Polyakov refused to be carried from the spacecraft, as is usual to acclimatiz­e astronauts and cosmonauts to Earth’s gravity. Instead, looking pale and unsteady, but otherwise healthy, he walked a short distance to a nearby chair and insisted that he felt “all right.”

Norman Thagard, the first American astronaut to join the Mir space station, who returned to Earth with Polyakov, described him as “big and strong and looks like he could wrestle a bear.”

Researcher­s later reported that Polyakov had experience­d a clear decline in mood as well as a feeling of “increased workload” during the first few weeks of his space mission, though his mood stabilized to pre-flight levels between the second and 14th month. Nor did he suffer from any prolonged impairment in physical or mental performanc­e. It was, Polyakov reflected later, “better not to count how much time has passed, but how much remains.”

While NASA and its astronauts tend to be somewhat coy on the subject of sex, Polyakov had no such inhibition­s, explaining that he had been told by psychologi­sts to take a sex doll with him, and that the space station had dirty movies available.

“No need to say what we are longing for,” he told Mission Control shortly before his return.

He was born Valeri Ivanovich Korshunov on April 27, 1942, in Tula, an industrial town south of Moscow, but changed his name to Valeri Vladimirov­ich Polyakov when he was adopted in 1959. After medical school he specialize­d in space medicine and was selected as a cosmonaut in 1972.

During his first space mission, from August 1988 to April 1989, he spent 240 days on Mir, an achievemen­t for which he was made a “Hero of the Soviet Union.”

He retired as a cosmonaut in June 1995.

He was married with one child.

 ?? ?? Valeri Polyakov
Valeri Polyakov

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