Spektr in its configuration consisted of: • 286K binocular radiometer • Astra 2 – monitored atmospheric trace constituents, Mir environment • Balkan 1
LIDAR – measures upper cloud altitude. Used a 5320-angstrom laser source, provided 4.5 m resolution • EFO 2 photometer • KOMZA – interstellar gas detector • Phaza spectrometer – surface studies. Examined wavelengths between 0.340 and 285 micrometers, and provides 200 km resolution • Taurus/Grif – monitored Mir's induced X/gamma-ray background • VRIZ UV spectroradiometer • MIRAS absorption spectrometer (couldn't operate due to failure) These experiments would have been a continuation of the research aboard a top-secret
TKS-M module, which docked to
Salyut 7 in 1985. However, with the end of the Cold War and the shrinking of Russia's space budget, the module was stuck on the ground. In the mid-1990s with the return of US-Russian cooperation in space, NASA agreed to provide funds to complete the Spektr and
Priroda modules in exchange for having 600 to 700 kg of US experiments installed. The Oktava military component was replaced with a conical mounting area for two additional solar arrays. The airlock for the Oktava targets to be used instead to expose experiments to the vacuum of space. Once in orbit, Spektr served as the living quarters for American astronauts until the collision in late June 1997. ==Collision==