R.V. Akademik Fedorov
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History | |
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USSR Russia (since 1991) |
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Name: | Akademik Fedorov |
Owner: | AARI |
Port of registry: | Saint Petersburg, Russia |
Builder: | Rauma-Repola, Rauma, Finland |
Launched: | September 8, 1987 |
Maiden voyage: | October 24, 1987 |
Identification: | IMO number: 8519837 |
Status: | In service |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage: | 12,660 t |
Displacement: | 16,200 t |
Length: | 141.2 metres |
Beam: | 23.5 metres |
Draft: | 8.5 metres |
Speed: | 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph) |
Capacity: | 172 passengers |
Crew: | 80 |
RV Akademik Fyodorov (Russian: Академик Фёдоров) is a Russian scientific diesel-electric research vessel, the flagship of the Russian polar research fleet. It was built in Rauma, Finland for the Soviet Union and completed on September 8, 1987. It started operations on October 24, 1987 in the USSR. The ship was named after a Soviet polar explorer, academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences Evgeny Fyodorov, who worked on the first Soviet manned drifting ice station North Pole-1.
Akademik Fyodorov made news on August 1, 2007 when it sailed in the path of an icebreaker on the way to the North Pole as part of Russia's efforts to lay claim to the sea bed beneath the North Pole.
On August 2, 2007, the Akademik Fyodorov sailed with 100 scientists and researchers and two deep sea mini-submarines to the North Pole where the scientists were dispatched to a depth of more than 13,200 feet (4,000 m) where they dropped a titanium capsule containing a Russian flag.
While the dropping of the flag was a symbolic gesture reminiscent of the United States of America's planting of an American flag on the surface of the moon, the act does not guarantee Russian rights to extract oil and gas from the sea bed.