Two decades ago the Soviet space shuttle Buran blasted off on its first and only orbital flight. Just a few years later, with the collapse of the Soviet Union, the programme was shelved.
After nearly a decade in a hangar, the only Buran that went into space was destroyed when a roof collapsed at Baikonur launch facility in 2002.
Although the Buran project ended prematurely, not all the ideas from it were left buried. Some of the technologies developed at the time are now used in everyday life. Fore example, several heat-resistant materials used to make deep-fryers are a direct result of the research done during Buran's development.
Buran technologies may make an unexpected return to the space industry as well.
Because NASA will soon retire its ageing space shuttle fleet, some American and Russian scientists are beginning to think of ways to revive the Buran programme.
It may be more economical than developing an entirely new spacecraft from scratch.
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- pjacobs51
- added this
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A very good idea but the money issue will eventully become a problem
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personally technology that is 20 years old shouldnt be explored. We need to go in a direction that is more 2009. im drunk though and listening to young jeezy so nasa should not ask me.
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NASA needs to look ahead and pave the way for exciting and new technology
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Well, if NASA is retiring their old space shuttles due to obsolete technology, why are they now turning to the shuttle knockoffs that Russia was building in the eighties?
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- crispyfritters
- 11 months ago
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