Sergei Korolev, the lead Soviet rocket engineer and spacecraft designer during the
Space Race in the 1950s, chose to use dogs to send into space because he believed that the emotional attachments made by scientists with dogs would ensure their obedience, and that
free-ranging dogs from the streets of Moscow were already adapted to survival. The dogs used in the spaceflight were chosen to fit specific criteria: they had to be female to allow them to urinate properly in their space suits, they had to be between to accommodate the rocket's weight limit, and they had to have light-colored fur so that they could appear easily on the camera aboard the rocket. Dezik and Tsygan were launched into
sub-orbital spaceflight on a Soviet
R-1 missile from
Kapustin Yar on July 22, 1951. They reached a height of and experienced
weightlessness for four minutes before falling back to Earth with a parachute. Korolev was greatly excited by their survival, and when they landed, he grabbed them and ran around with them before giving them water, sausages, and sugar. ==Later life==