Starman_ The Truth Behind the Legend of Yuri Gagarin - Jamie Doran [74]
Gherman Titov remembers how the female cosmonauts were greeted with distrust when they arrived at Star City. ‘Frankly speaking, we didn’t believe that womenfolk belonged anywhere near a flying machine. At that time, we thought that only men could carry out all the tasks involved in space flight. When the first women arrived, my feelings were negative. As everyone knows, Titov states his opinions on everything! But in the end we saw it was quite correct to have female cosmonauts, and we soon thought of them as good fellows, just like us.’
At last Yuri Gagarin was reassigned to a meaningful work schedule. At Star City he was appointed to head the female cosmonauts’ training programme, in conjunction with his cosmonaut colleague and friend Andrian Nikolayev. On July 12, 1962 he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel, and eased his way back into the rhythm of real work by serving as prime radio communicator (what NASA would call a ‘CapCom’) during Nikolayev and Popov’s double Vostok flight in August. Then he laid down an intensive physical training regime for his five female students (though he was still called away at intervals for yet more foreign trips).
By now, the training for a fully automated Vostok mission was not particularly difficult. Tereshkova’s eventual flight on June 16, 1963 presented very few fresh technical challenges. She made a close approach to another Vostok carrying Valery Bykovsky, but, as with the previous double-flight, the real trick was in the timing of the respective launches. However, her success gave Khrushchev the opportunity he was waiting for – to gloat about ‘the equality of men and women in our country’. Once this propagandist experiment was successfully completed, the women’s cosmonaut squad was quietly disbanded. On November 3, 1963 Tereshkova and Nikolayev were married in Moscow in a very public ceremony. It was the social event of the season, much enjoyed by Khrushchev. Three days later Gagarin was promoted to full Colonel. It seemed as if his career was progressing, but, as he would discover, higher rank could hinder as well as help him in his quest for another flight into space.
Bykovsky and Tereshkova’s double-flight was the last mission for Vostok in its current configuration. By the summer of 1963 there was no longer any need for the Soviets to compete with America’s Mercury. After launching Gordon Cooper for a 34-hour mission on May 15, 1963, NASA decided that the programme had nothing else to prove. What more could these simple one-man capsules possibly accomplish?
In fact, NASA was planning to use a new missile, the ‘Titan’, developed by the US Air Force and reluctantly hired out on licence. Titan’s fuel tank and outer skin were one and the same component, which saved weight. On the launch pad, the rocket was so flimsy that it could only stand upright if it was pressurized with inert gas, but it was so powerful in relation to its weight that it could carry a payload much heavier than the Mercury capsule.
NASA knew that its three-man Apollo moonship and its huge Saturn V rocket were years away from a first flight. So far they had only designers’ mock-ups, not real hardware, to play with. Meanwhile, an interim vehicle was developed: a cross between the simplicity of Mercury and the complexity of the emerging Apollo. ‘Gemini’ was a two-man capsule designed to mate with