{{Infobox Space mission | mission_name = Soyuz T-9 | sign = Proton | crew_members = 2 | launch = June_27, 1983
09:12:00 UTC
Baikonur LC1 | landing = November_23, 1983
19:58:00 UTC
160 km E of Dzhezkazgan | duration = 149 days, 10 h, 45 min | orbits = 2361 |}} ==Crew== *Vladimir_Lyakhov (2) *Aleksandr_Pavlovich_Aleksandrov (1) ==Mission parameters== *'''Mass:''' 6850 kg *'''Perigee:''' 201 km *'''Apogee:''' 229 km *'''Inclination:''' 51.6° *'''Period:''' 88.6 minutes ==Mission highlights== 4th expedition to Salyut-7. Its mission was heavily impacted by the Soyuz-T and Soyuz booster failures which bracketed it. Almost immediately after docking at Salyut 7’s aft port, the Protons entered Cosmos 1443 and commenced transferring the 3.5 tons of cargo lining its walls to Salyut 7. Window impact. On July 27 a small object struck a Salyut 7 viewport. It blasted out a 4-mm crater, but did not penetrate the outer of the window’s two panes. The Soviets believed it was a member of the Delta Aquarid meteor shower, though it may have been a small piece of orbital debris. The Protons loaded Cosmos 1443’s Merkur capsule with 350 kg of experiment results and hardware no longer in use. It could have held 500 kg, had they had that much to put in. Cosmos 1443 then undocked, in spite of Western predictions that the FGB component would remain attached to Salyut 7 as a space station module. The Merkur capsule soft-landed on August 23, and the FGB component continued in orbit until it was deorbited over the Pacific Ocean on September 19. {{sequence| prev=Soyuz_T-8| list=Soyuz_programme| next=Soyuz_T-10-1 }} Soyuz T-09 De:Sojus_T-9 Fr:Soyouz_T-9 It:Soyuz_T-9 Pl:Sojuz_T-9 Pt:Soyuz_T-9 Ru:Союз_Т-9