On March 30, a postcard with a commemorative stamp dedicated to the 50th Anniversary of launching the world’s first orbital scientific station Salyut will go into postal circulation in the Space Exploration series

 

On April 19, 1971, the Soviet Union launched the world’s first orbital scientific station Salute. It was a spacecraft of a new type that permitted automatic and man-assisted comprehensive scientific research under conditions of long duration flight.
Salute was a family of manned orbital stations of the USSR. The collective name Salute was given to orbital stations that were placed into orbit in the framework of the Long-term orbital station civil program.

From 1973 to 1986, six other orbital stations named Salyut were launched where Soviet and foreign cosmonauts worked. A great variety of scientific experiments were conducted in space, and a cosmonauts’ life support system was elaborated out. The design of Salyut stations made the basis for construction not only of long-term orbital stations, but also of the Mir orbital complex and the Russian segment of the International Space Station.

The postcard provides a symbolic image of a carrier vehicle being launched into space; the main image features the world’s first orbital scientific station Salute.

In addition to the issue of the postcard with a commemorative stamp, JSC Marka will produce special cancels for Moscow, Korolyov of the Moscow Region, St. Petersburg, Penza and Baikonur.

Design Artists: A. Drobyshev, R. Komsa.
Quantity: 16 thousand postcards. 

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