Baltimore Sun

NOTABLE DEATHS ELSEWHERE Valery Polyakov, 80

- Physician/astronaut

Dr. Valery Polyakov, a physician and astronaut who held the world record for consecutiv­e days spent in outer space, 437, has died. He was 80.

Russia’s space agency announced the death without specifying when or where it occurred or the cause.

Polyakov took off for the Russian Mir space station Jan. 8, 1994, and returned to Earth 437 days, 17 hours and 38 minutes later, on March 22, 1995. He had orbited Earth 7,075 times and traveled nearly 187 million miles, according to the New Mexico Museum of Space History.

A specialist in space medicine, he had volunteere­d for the mission to prove that the human body could survive microgravi­ty long enough to reach Mars, Wired magazine reported in 2010.

Rather than be carried out of his capsule on his return, Polyakov walked on his own strength, sat down, stole a cigarette from a friend and began sipping brandy, according to “The Story of Manned Space Stations: An Introducti­on,” by Philip Baker.

Polyakov’s record remains unbeaten. In March, Mark Vande Hei returned to Earth after spending 355 days in space aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station, the Mir’s successor, a record for an American.

Valery Ivanovich Korshunov was born April 27, 1942, in the Russian city of Tula, according to the Museum of Space History. He changed his name after being adopted by his stepfather. He was inspired to specialize in space medicine by Boris Yegorov, the first physician to fly in space. Polyakov developed his expertise in the field at the Institute of Medical and Biological Problems in Moscow.

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