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Human spaceflights were vital to the operation of Mir, allowing crews and equipment to be carried to and from the space station.Mir was visited by a total of 39 crewed missions, comprising 30 Soyuz flights (1 Soyuz-T, 29 Soyuz-TM) and 9 Space Shuttle flights.
This is a chronological list of principal expeditions to Mir, a Soviet/Russian space station in low Earth orbit from 1986–2001. All principal Mir crews (those that were resident long-term on the station) were named "Mir EO-n", where EO stands for Expedition Operations, and the n is sequentially increased with each expedition.
This is a detailed list of human spaceflights from 1991 to 2000, including the continuation of Russian space station Mir and the American Space Shuttle program, and the first flights to the International Space Station (ISS). The Soviet Union broke up at the end of 1991.
This is a list of missions conducted by Progress automated spacecraft. Progress is an uncrewed Russian (previously Soviet) cargo spacecraft which has been used since 1978 to deliver supplies to Soviet space stations Salyut 6, Salyut 7, Mir, and later to the International Space Station. All launches have occurred from the Baikonur Cosmodrome.
This is a detailed list of human spaceflights from 1981 to 1990, spanning the end of the Soviet Union's Salyut space station program, the beginning of Mir, and the start of the US Space Shuttle program. Red indicates fatalities. Green indicates suborbital flights (including flights that failed to attain intended orbit). #
Docked with an uncrewed Mir. Progress M1-2 [65] Logistics: Soyuz-U: 25 April 2000 20:08 [2] Kvant-1 27 April 2000 21:28 15 October 2000 18:06 170 d, 20 h, 38 m 16 October 2000 Progress M-43 [66] Logistics: Soyuz-U: 16 October 2000 21:27 [2] Kvant-1 20 October 2000 21:16 27 January 2001 05:19 98 d, 8 h, 3 m 29 January 2001 02:12 Docked with an ...
This is a list of visitors to the Mir space station in alphabetical order. Station crew names are in bold. The suffix (twice) refers to the individual's number of Mir visits, not their total number of space flights. Entries without a flag symbol indicate that the person was a citizen from the bloc of countries comprising the former Soviet Union ...
Soyuz spacecraft previously visited the Salyut and Mir space stations. Between the retirement of the Space Shuttle in 2011 and the first orbital flight of SpaceX's Crew Dragon in 2019, Soyuz were the only human-rated orbital spacecraft in operation, and the only way to transport crews to the ISS.