VAlery POLYAKOV
The First Orbiting Space Station was Salyut 1. The first crew was unable to dock, but the second crew stayed for 23 days, but died from exposer to the vacuum of space while undocking. The world's first space station was de-orbited 175 days after launch.
The first permanently occupied space station was the Soviet space station Salyut 1, which was launched on April 19, 1971. It remained in orbit for 175 days and was crewed by multiple cosmonauts during its mission.
The name of the first permanent space station from Russia was Mir. It was launched in 1986. The first crew spent 75 days aboard.
Pontifract space station
The first space station, Salyut 1, was launched by the Soviet Union on April 19, 1971. It was inhabited for 23 days by the crew of Soyuz 10.
Chemist Helen Patricia Sharman (born 30 May 1963) was the first Briton in space, visiting the Mir space station for nearly eight days in 1991.
The first successful space station in space was the U.S. made Skylab , it had crews visiting it on three different occasions , and each crew lived for longer periods then the previous ones.
The first space station was called Salyut 1, launched by the Soviet Union on April 19, 1971. It was designed to support long-duration missions and conduct scientific research in space. Salyut 1 operated for 175 days before re-entering Earth's atmosphere in October 1971. The station successfully hosted the first crewed space mission to a space station in June 1971.
The first space station was launched by the USSR in 1971. It was called Salyut 1 (Salute 1 in English). Salyut 1's purpose was to test the elements of the systems of a space station and to conduct scientific research. The space station was 20m long and 4m in diameter. Salyut 1 was launched unmanned, but later visited by the crew of Soyuz 11. After spending 22 days on board Salyut 1, the crew undocked and returned to Earth. After 175 days in space, Salyut 1 was deorbited and destroyed in the Earth's atmosphere.
The first Canadian space tourist was billionaire entrepreneur and philanthropist Guy Laliberté. He flew to the International Space Station in September 2009 aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, spending 11 days in space.
That depends on what is meant by space station. The first docking of two craft occurred March 16 1966. Salyut 1 was a short term facility inhabited only 24 days of 1971 and was allowed to reenter in October 1971. The first "long term" constantly inhabited station was Mir.
a space station