50th anniversary of the end of the Great Patriotic War
Owner
Russian Federation
Operator
FSUE Atomflot
Port of registry
Murmansk, Russia[1]
Builder
Baltic Shipyard
Yard number
705
Laid down
4 October 1989
Launched
29 December 1993
Commissioned
23 March 2007[2]
Maiden voyage
2007
Identification
IMO number: 9152959
Call sign: UGYU
Status
In active service
General characteristics [3]
Class and type
Arktika-class icebreaker
Tonnage
23,439 GT
3,505 DWT
Displacement
25,168 tons
Length
159.6 m (524 ft)
Beam
30 m (98 ft)
Draught
11 m (36 ft)
Depth
17.2 m (56 ft)
Installed power
Two OK-900A nuclear reactors (2×171MW)
Two steam turbogenerators (2×27.6MW)
Propulsion
Nuclear-turbo-electric
Three shafts (3×18MW)
Speed
18.6 knots (34.4 km/h; 21.4 mph) (maximum)
Endurance
7.5 months
Crew
189
Aircraft carried
1 × Mi-2, Mi-8 or Ka-27 helicopter
Aviation facilities
Helipad and hangar for one helicopter
50 Let Pobedy (Russian: 50 лет Победы; "50 Years of Victory", referring to the anniversary of victory of the Soviet Union in World War II) is a Russian Arktika-class nuclear-powered icebreaker.
^Cite error: The named reference reg was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^"Атомный ледокол "50 лет ПОБЕДЫ"". polarpost.ru. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
^"Atomic Icebreakers Technical Data". rosatomflot.ru. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
50LetPobedy (Russian: 50 лет Победы; "50 Years of Victory", referring to the anniversary of victory of the Soviet Union in World War II) is a Russian...
four service vessels and seven nuclear-powered icebreakers (“Yamal”, "50LetPobedy", "Taymyr", "Vaygach", "Arctic", "Siberia" and Ural). The last three...
icebreakers in addition to completing the unfinished Arktika-class icebreaker 50LetPobedy and starting the preliminary design development of the next generation...
Admiral Makarov. In shots which include live footage of the 2007-built 50LetPobedy, the blue-and-white polar bear logo of the former operator of the Russian...
four service vessels and seven nuclear-powered icebreakers (“Yamal”, "50LetPobedy", "Taymyr", "Vaygach", "Arctic", "Siberia" and "Ural"). The last three...
by a joint team of Russian and American scientists. 2007 NS 50LetPobedy NS 50LetPobedy is the world's largest nuclear-powered icebreaker, and the largest...
propulsion steam turbine cycle efficiencies have yet to break 50%, yet diesel engines routinely exceed 50%, especially in marine applications. Diesel power plants...
trials were completed for the nuclear-powered Russian icebreaker NS 50LetPobedy. The vessel was put into service by Murmansk Shipping Company, which...
Arktika-class 1989–2012 Laid up in Murmansk; to be converted to a command ship 50LetPobedy Arktika-class 2007–present Arktika Project 22220 2020 Sibir Project...
comprised the Swedish icebreaker Oden and Russian nuclear icebreaker NS 50LetPobedy. The latter led the expedition through the ice fields to the research...
traveled to the North Pole on the nuclear-powered Russian icebreaker 50LetPobedy. He has traveled to 1250 of 1301 regions around the world and is now...
geologists returned from a six-week voyage on a nuclear icebreaker 50LetPobedy, the expedition called Arktika 2007. They had travelled to the Lomonosov...
reached the North Pole for first time via a nuclear-powered icebreaker (50LetPobedy). The torch was also passed for the first time in space, though not...
diesel polar icebreakers. Its nuclear icebreaker fleet includes the 50LetPobedy (50 Years of Victory), the largest nuclear icebreaker in the world. There...
reached the North Pole for first time via a nuclear-powered icebreaker 50LetPobedy. On November 6, 2013, the torch was flown into space by Soyuz rocket...
She traveled 3,100 miles on the Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker 50LetPobedy to the North Pole, where the crew ignited a cauldron with the Olympic...
Soviet Union portal Russia portal "God Save the Tsar!" "Grom pobedy, razdavajsya!" ("Let the thunder of victory rumble!") National anthem of Russia Patrioticheskaya...
words and music were Russian. Others[who?] say the title belongs to Grom pobedy, razdavaysya!, another popular song of the time, although it never had official...