List of crewed spacecraft
This is a list of Human spaceflight types, including space stations, sorted by nation and series in chronological order. Canceled programs are listed at the end.
Comparison
Current human spacecraft
Orbital
Russian
- Soyuz (1967–present) 3 person Earth orbital;[1] fourth and fifth generations continued operation by Russian Federation. 128 crewed spaceflights (including 1 sub-orbital) as of April 2016. 2 accidental crew losses.
Chinese
- Shenzhou (2003–present) 3 person Earth orbital craft. 5 flights as of April 2016.
Space stations
Main article: Space station
- International Space Station (2000–present) Unmanned initial assembly 1998-2000
- Tiangong 2 (2016–present)[2]
Former human spacecraft
Orbital
Soviet/Russian
American
- Mercury spacecraft (1961–1963) single-person Earth orbital craft[5] 6 flights (including 2 sub-orbital).
- Gemini spacecraft (1965–1966) 2 person Earth orbital craft[6] 10 flights.
- Apollo spacecraft (1968-1975) 15 flights; including 9 lunar missions (with 6 lunar landings).
- Command/Service Module (1968–1975) 3 person Earth and lunar orbital craft[7]
- Lunar Module (1969–1972) 2 person lunar lander[8]
- Space Shuttle (1981–2011) 2-8 person Earth orbital craft; first orbit-capable spaceplane; first partially reusable orbital spacecraft. 135 flights were made in 5 shuttles, of which 2 were accidentally destroyed and crews lost.
Suborbital
- X-15 (1963) single seat, air-launched spaceplane; two X-15 flights above the Kármán line occurred in 1963[9]
- SpaceShipOne (2004) single seat, air-launched spaceplane; three flights above the Kármán line occurred in 2004.
Space stations
- Salyut series (1971–1991)[10] Salyut's 1, 4, 6, and 7.
- Skylab (1973–1974) Three crews. De-orbited 1979.
- Almaz series (1973–1977) Military reconnaissance stations. Badged as Salyut 2, 3 and 5 as disinformation.
- Mir (1986–2000) 28 crews. De-orbited 2001.
- Tiangong 1 (2011–2012) 2 crews. Still in orbit but will not receive any further crews.
In development
Orbital
American
- SpaceX's Dragon V2 - 7 person Earth orbital craft - 1st crewed flight planned for August 2017.[11]
- Boeing's CST-100 Starliner - 7 person Earth orbital craft - 1st crewed flight planned for March 2018[12]
- NASA's Orion - 4 person beyond Earth orbit craft [13] - 1st crewed flight planned for 2023.[14]
- Sierra Nevada's Dream Chaser - 7 person Earth orbital space plane[15]
- Blue Origin's orbital spacecraft[15]
- SpaceX's Interplanetary Spaceship - 100+ person beyond Earth orbit craft (crew size expected to be smaller on early flights).[16]
Russian
- Federatsiya - 4 person Lunar capable craft - 1st crewed flight planned for 2024[17]
Indian
Iranian
British
Suborbital
American
- Blue Origin's New Shepard - crewed flight planned for 2017.[21]
- Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo[22]
Chinese
- The Chinese winged rocket - the plane may one day fly up passengers to the edge of space. Two versions: one should be able to fly five people to an altitude of 100 kilometres; other - could fly 20 people to 130 kilometres. Payload launches in 2020.[23]
Japan
- PD Aerospace, Ltd. sub-orbital rocket plane[24]
Russian
- RSSC - reusable sub-orbital space complex MCKK, private company "KosmoKurs". 1st flight planned for 2020[25][26]
Space Stations
- Bigelow Commercial Space Station or Space Complex Alpha, proposed private space habitat scheduled for 2020 initial deployment
- OPSEK, proposed Russian successor to the International Space Station
- Tiangong-3, a larger Chinese space station tentatively scheduled for 2022
Proposed
- Advanced Re-Entry Vehicle European manned spaceship[27]
- Golden Spike Company's Flyer (lunar)
- Mars One's Transit Living Module and Human Lander (Martian)
- Masten Space Systems' O Series (orbital)
- Masten Space Systems' XL Series (orbital/lunar)
- SpaceShipThree (suborbital)
Cancelled
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
- Space Transportation System (1976 - 2011, all elements canceled, except the Space Shuttle, which took the name)
- VentureStar, Lockheed Martin X-33 demonstrator (canceled 2001) single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) shuttle
- Altair Lunar Surface Access Module for Constellation program
Joint NASA / United States Air Force
- Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar (canceled 1963) winged orbital space plane, launched by Titan 3
- Manned Orbiting Laboratory + Gemini-B spacecraft (canceled 1969)
- Rockwell X-30 or National AeroSpace Plane (canceled 1993) to be used as a hypersonic transport plane or as a single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) shuttle
Joint NASA / European Space Agency (ESA)
- X-38 (canceled 1999) lifting body crew-rescue vehicle for ISS
Soviet space program
- Soyuz 7K-VI Zvezda[28] (1962-1968; military researching ship)
- Soyuz 7K-L1 (1967–1970) part of the abandoned Soviet manned lunar flyby program
- Soyuz L3 spacecraft (late 1960s to early 1970s); part of the abandoned Soviet manned lunar landing program (The LOK would carry two cosmonauts into orbit around the Moon, acting as "mother" spacecraft for the LK Lander, which would land one member of the crew to the surface)
- Soyuz 7K-L3 (LOK) 2 person lunar orbital craft
- LK Lander Module single-pilot lunar lander
- Spiral-EPOS (also known as EPOS – Russian acronym for Experimental Passenger Orbital Aircraft – canceled 1976)[29]
- Shuttle Buran (1976-1988) canceled after one unmanned orbital flight[30]
- Strelec (Archer; 1979 - 1991) universal military 3 person spaceship - tank, which was created within the project of cosmical complex Sapfir (Sapphire, project canceled)[31]
- Zarya (project canceled 1989)
- MAKS (project canceled 1991)
Russian Federal Space Agency (RKA)
- Kliper (government funding canceled 2006)
European Space Agency (ESA)
- Hermes (project cancelled 1992)
- Hopper (project cancelled)
- Advanced Re-entry Vehicle (ARV) 4 person spacecraft (orbital)[32]
- Crew Space Transportation System (orbital); project evolved into Russia's Federation spacecraft
Space stations
- Columbus-MTFF (project cancelled 1991)
China National Space Administration (CNSA)
Japan
National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA)
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)
- HTV-R (orbital)
Non-official
- Kankoh-maru (proposed 1993–1995)
United Kingdom
USA (private)
- XCOR Lynx spaceplane (started 2008, cancelled 2016)
References
- ↑ Gatland, pp.148-165
- ↑ http://www.techtimes.com/articles/137291/20160229/china-prepares-to-launch-second-space-lab-tiangong-2-into-orbit-in-2016.htm
- ↑ Gatland, pp.109-115
- ↑ Gatland, pp.131-113
- ↑ Gatland, pp.148, 151-165
- ↑ Gatland, pp.166-185, 266-275
- ↑ Gatland, pp.190, 278-280
- ↑ Gatland, pp.191, 207, 283, 284
- ↑ Long, Tony (2007-07-19). "July 19, 1963: Cracking the 100-Kilometer-High Barrier ... in a Plane". Advance Publications. Retrieved 18 November 2011.
- ↑ Gatland, pp.229-246
- ↑ http://spaceflights.news/?p=15604
- ↑ http://spacenews.com/boeing-delays-first-crewed-cst-100-flight-to-2018/
- ↑ "Orion Quick Facts" (PDF). NASA. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
- ↑ http://www.space.com/30560-nasa-orion-space-capsule-crewed-launch-delay.html
- 1 2 Ferster, Warren (2011-04-18). "NASA Announces CCDev 2 Awards". Imaginova Corp. Retrieved 18 November 2011.
- ↑ http://spacenews.com/spacex-unveils-mars-mission-plans/
- ↑ http://www.russianspaceweb.com/ptk-2015.html
- ↑ http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/others/Indias-manned-space-mission-not-in-near-future-or-never/articleshow/50034034.cms
- ↑ http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Too_Ambitious_to_be_True_Iran_Plans_to_Send_Humans_to_Space_by_2016_999.html
- ↑ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3359967/Spaceplanes-vs-super-rockets-Expert-reveals-win-battle-cheap-space.html
- ↑ http://news.discovery.com/space/private-spaceflight/inside-jeff-bezos-secret-rocket-factory-160311.htm
- ↑ http://edition.cnn.com/2016/02/19/us/virgin-galactic-new-space-plane/
- ↑ https://www.newscientist.com/article/2107802-china-plans-worlds-biggest-spaceplane-to-carry-20-tourists
- ↑ http://protechnology.jp/companies/development-and-production-of-prototype/pd-aerospace/
- ↑ http://technicamolodezhi.ru/rubriki_tm/klub_tm/V_KOSMOS_S_MYAGKOY_PEREGRUZKOY
- ↑ http://www.cosmocourse.com/
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "printer friendly page ATV evolution: Advanced Reentry Vehicle (ARV)". European Space Agency. 2010-03-25. Retrieved 18 November 2011.
Sources
- Gatland, Kenneth (1976). Manned Spacecraft (2nd ed.). New York City: MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc. ISBN 0-02-542820-9.
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