Orlan Space Suits
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270px, Cosmonaut Maksim Surayev next to two Orlan-MK models on the International Space Station image:Sharipov one.jpg, 270px, Cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov, next to the Orlan-M spacesuit. The Orlan space suit (russian: Орлан, lit=Sea eagle (bird), sea eagle) is a series of semi-rigid one-piece space suit models designed and built by NPP Zvezda. They have been used for spacewalks (EVAs) in the Russian space program, the successor to the Soviet space program, and by space programs of other countries, including NASA.


History

The first spacewalk using an Orlan suit took place on December 20, 1977, on the Soviet
space station A space station is a spacecraft capable of supporting a human crew in orbit for an extended period of time, and is therefore a type of space habitat. It lacks major propulsion or landing systems. An orbital station or an orbital space station i ...
Salyut 6, during the
Soyuz 26 Soyuz 26 (russian: Союз 26, ''Union 26'') was a Soviet space mission which launched the crew of Salyut 6 EO-1, the first long duration crew on the space station Salyut 6. The Soyuz spacecraft was launched on 10 December 1977, and docked with ...
mission. Yuri Romanenko and Georgi Grechko tested the Orlan-D space suit. The Orlan-DM was used for the first time on August 2, 1985, by the cosmonauts Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savinykh of
Salyut 7 Salyut 7 (russian: Салют-7; en, Salute 7) (a.k.a. DOS-6, short for Durable Orbital Station) was a space station in low Earth orbit from April 1982 to February 1991. It was first crewed in May 1982 with two crew via Soyuz T-5, and last vi ...
. The Orlan space suits were used for spacewalks on the Salyut stations, but for Mir they were replaced by the Orlan-DMA and Orlan-M suits: The Orlan-DMA was used for the first time in November 1988, by the cosmonaut Musa Manarov from the Mir space station. The Orlan-M continued in use on Mir from 1997 until the end of the station's operational life and is now used on the International Space Station. Orlan space suits have been used by Russian, American, European, Canadian and Chinese astronauts. On February 3, 2006, a retired Orlan fitted with a radio transmitter, dubbed
SuitSat-1 SuitSat (also known as SuitSat-1, Mr. Smith, Ivan Ivanovich, RadioSkaf, Radio Sputnik, and AMSAT-OSCAR 54) was a retired Russian Orlan space suit with a radio transmitter mounted on its helmet, used as a hand-launched satellite. First devised ...
, was launched into orbit from the International Space Station. In April 2004, China imported 12 Orlan spacesuits from Russia: Three for EVA, two for airlock training, four for neutral buoyancy tank training, four for testing the EVA support system on the Shenzhou spacecraft. Various components on the EVA suits and airlock training suits, including electrical and communication equipments, were designed and manufactured by China. In Chinese, Orlan spacesuits are referred by the literal translation of , Haiying. () On 27 September 2008, Liu Boming wore one of the Orlan suits in order to assist Zhai Zhigang during the space walk portion of Shenzhou 7 mission. In June 2009, the latest computerized Orlan-MK version was tested during a five-hour spacewalk to install new equipment on the International Space Station. The new suit's main improvement is the replacement of the radio-telemetry equipment in the Portable Life Support System backpack which contains a mini-computer. This computer processes data from the spacesuit's various systems and provides a malfunction warning. It then outlines a contingency plan which is displayed on an LCD screen on the right chest part of the spacesuit. In September 2020, it was announced that Zvezda had started manufacturing space suits for Indian astronauts, part of the Gaganyaan crewed mission, four of which had begun training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Russia in 2019.


Design

The Orlan space suit has gone through several models. Space-rated designations include the Orlan-D, Orlan-DM, Orlan-DMA, and Orlan-M models; the Orlan-GN, Orlan-T, and Orlan-V are used in training and are used underwater. The latest model, called Orlan-MKS, has been used on the ISS since 2017. The original Orlan suit, with a two and a half hour operation time, was designed as an orbital suit for use on the Soviet Lunar programme, although it was abandoned in favour of a model with a greater operating capacity. The Orlan-D expanded the operation time to three hours; the Orlan-M to nine hours. The designed average lifespan of the spacesuit is four years (or up to 15 EVA's) and, according to tradition at the manufacturing plant, suits with blue stripes are assigned even production numbers and red, odd numbers. The Orlan space suit is semi-rigid, with a solid torso and flexible arms. It includes a rear hatch entry through the backpack that allows it to be donned relatively quickly (approximately five minutes). The first Orlan suits were attached to the spacecraft by an
umbilical Umbilical may refer to: *Umbilical cable *Umbilical cord *Umbilical fold *Umbilical hernia *Umbilical notch *Umbilical vessels **Umbilical artery **Umbilical vein *Umbilical zone *The Umbilical Brothers, two Australian comedic performers, David a ...
tether that supplied power and communications links. The Orlan-DM and later models are self-sustaining.


Models


Lunar orbit suit

*Name: Orlan Lunar Orbital Spacesuit *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda *Missions: Development occurred from 1967-1971, no flight models that were operational were produced. *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating pressure: *Mass: *Primary life support: 5 hours


D model

*Name: Orlan-D *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda *Missions: Developed from 1969-1977. Used on Salyut-6 and Salyut-7 Space Stations. Used from 1977-1984. *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating Pressure: *Mass: *Primary Life Support: 5 hours


DM model

*Name: Orlan-DM *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda Company *Missions: Used on Salyut-7 and Mir. Used from 1985-1988. *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating pressure: *Mass: *Primary life support: 6 hours


DMA model

*Name: Orlan-DMA *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda *Missions: Used on Mir. Used from 1988-1997. *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating Pressure: *Mass: *Primary Life Support: 7 hours


M model

*Name: Orlan-M *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda *Missions: Used on Mir and ISS. Used from 1997-2009? *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating Pressure: *Mass: *Primary Life Support: 7 hours


MK model

*Name: Orlan-MK *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda *Missions: Used on ISS. Used from 2009-2017.RuSpace
/ref> *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating pressure: *Mass: *Primary life support: 7 hours


MKS model

*Name: Orlan-MKS *Manufacturer: NPP Zvezda *Missions: Used on ISS. Used from 2017-present.RuSpace
/ref> *Function: Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) *Operating pressure: *Mass: *Primary life support: 7 hours


Training

Orlan suits are used in the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonauts Training Center in Star City, Moscow: the Orlan-GN for water immersion training, the Orlan-T for airlock procedure training, and the Orlan-V for low gravity flight training.


See also

* Hard Upper Torso * Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment * Sokol space suit * Soviet SPK *
List of spacewalks Lists of spacewalks and moonwalks include: By date: * List of spacewalks and moonwalks 1965–1999 * List of spacewalks 2000–2014 * List of spacewalks since 2015 By space station: * List of Salyut spacewalks * List of Mir spacewalks * List ...
* List of Mir spacewalks *
List of ISS spacewalks On the International Space Station (ISS), extravehicular activities are major events in the building and maintaining of the orbital laboratory, and are performed to install new components, re-wire systems, modules, and equipment, and to moni ...
* List of spacewalks and moonwalks * List of cumulative spacewalk records


References


External links


Orlan space suit images at Myspacemuseum.comOrlan Spacesuit EVA (Video) - Dec 23, 2008
{{space suit Soviet and Russian spacesuits Extravehicular activity