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1975 · National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Apollo-Soyuz Test Project

successSaturn IB | Apollo-Soyuz Test Project

The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was the first joint US-Soviet space flight and the last crewed US space mission until the Space Shuttle program. The US side of mission began on July 15, 1975, 19:50:00 UTC, launching Commander Thomas P. Stafford, Command Module Pilot Vance D. Brand and Docking Module Pilot Donald K. Slayton into orbit. Two days later, they docked with the Soyuz 19 spacecraft. American and Soviet crews visited each other's spacecrafts, performed docking and redocking maneuvers, conducted joint scientific experiments, exchanged flags and gifts. Crews spent more than 44 hours together, and after final parting of the ships on July 19, Apollo crew spent nine more days in orbit, conducting Earth observation experiments. The Apollo crew returned to Earth on July 24, 1975, 21:18:0 UTC with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

Overview

Date / time
July 15, 1975 at 07:50 PM UTC
Outcome
success
Launch site
Launch Complex 39B
Mission
Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
Mission type
Human Exploration
Orbit achieved
Low Earth Orbit
Launch vehicle
Saturn IB →
Launch provider
National Aeronautics and Space Administration →

Payloads deployed · 1

APOLLO 18
LEO