Timeline of space exploration
This is for a timeline of space exploration including notable achievements and first accomplishments in humanity's exploration of outer space.
Before 1959
Date | Event leading to space exploration | Country | Researcher(s) |
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1610 | First telescopic observation of the night sky: Discovery of Jupiter's moons, lunar craters and the phases of Venus. | ![]() |
Galileo Galilei |
1687 | Publication of the Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica | ![]() |
Sir Isaac Newton |
1813 | First exposition of the rocket equation based on Newton's third law of motion: Treatise on the Motion of Rockets | ![]() |
William Moore |
1840 | First clear telescopic photograph of another world: The Moon. | ![]() |
John William Draper |
1865 | From the Earth to the Moon published. | ![]() |
Jules Verne |
1898 | The War of the Worlds published. This inspired Robert Goddard to investigate rocketry. | ![]() |
H. G. Wells |
1903 | Inspired by the writings of Jules Verne, first serious work published that showed physical space exploration was theoretically possible: Исследование мировых пространств реактивными приборами (The Exploration of Cosmic Space by Means of Reaction Devices) | ![]() |
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky |
1914 | Goddard files for and is subsequently awarded U.S. patents on multistage and liquid-fueled rockets | ![]() |
Robert H. Goddard |
1919 | Goddard's widely influential paper "A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes" discussed solid- and liquid-fueled rocketry | ![]() |
Robert H. Goddard |
15 December 1923 | Die Rakete zu den Planetenräumen ("By Rocket into Planetary Space") self-published after its rejection as a doctoral thesis. | ![]() |
Hermann Oberth |
1924 | Society for Studies of Interplanetary Travel founded in Soviet Union | ![]() |
members include Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, Friedrich Zander, Yuri Kondratyuk |
16 March 1926 | Goddard launches the first liquid-fueled rocket | ![]() |
Robert H. Goddard |
1927 | Verein für Raumschiffahrt (Society for Space Travel) formed; it includes many top European rocket scientists. | ![]() |
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1927 | "The Conquest of Interplanetary Space" discusses rocket mechanics and orbital effects including the gravitational slingshot | ![]() |
Yuri Kondratyuk |
1928 | Das Problem der Befahrung des Weltraums – der Raketen-Motor (The Problem of Space Travel – The Rocket Motor) discusses space travel and its potential uses for scientific experiments. | ![]() |
Herman Potočnik |
1929 | Oberth, with students including Wernher von Braun, launches his first liquid-fueled rocket | ![]() |
Hermann Oberth |
1931 | First German military liquid-fueled rocket engines developed | ![]() |
Walter Riedel |
1933 | Work begins on the Aggregate series of rockets which leads to the V-2 rocket. | ![]() |
Wernher von Braun |
17 August 1933 | Group for the Study of Reactive Motion (GIRD) launches the first Soviet liquid-fueled rocket | ![]() |
Sergey Korolev (group leader), Friedrich Zander (designer) |
1935 | Graduate student Frank Malina under his professor Theodore von Kármán begins work on a sounding rocket | ![]() |
Frank Malina |
3 October 1942 | First vehicle to cross the Kármán line (100 km/~62 mi above the Earth's surface) and thereby enter outer space[1] | ![]() |
V-2 rocket, military program |
10 May 1946 | First space research flight (cosmic radiation experiments) | ![]() |
captured and improved V-2 rocket |
22 May 1946 | First U.S.-designed rocket to reach edge of space (80 km (49 mi)) | ![]() |
WAC Corporal |
24 October 1946 | First pictures of Earth from 105 km (65 mi) [1][2] | ![]() |
V-2 |
20 February 1947 | First animals in space (fruit flies) [1] | ![]() |
V-2 |
1957–1959
Date | Mission Achievements | Country/Organization | Mission Name |
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21 August 1957 | First intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) | ![]() |
R-7 Semyorka/SS-6 Sapwood |
4 October 1957 | First artificial satellite First signals from space |
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Sputnik 1 |
3 November 1957 | First animal in orbit, the dog Laika | ![]() |
Sputnik 2 |
31 January 1958 | Confirmed the existence of the Van Allen belts | ![]() |
Explorer 1 |
2 January 1959 | First firing of a rocket in Earth orbit First reaching Earth escape velocity or Trans Lunar Injection First detection of solar wind |
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Luna 1 |
4 January 1959 | First artificial satellite to reach the Moon vicinity and first artificial satellite in heliocentric orbit | ![]() |
Luna 1 |
7 August 1959 | First photograph of Earth from orbit | ![]() |
Explorer 6 |
13 September 1959 | First impact into another world (the Moon) First delivery of national (USSR) pennants to a celestial body |
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Luna 2 |
4 October 1959 | First photos of another world from space: The far side of the Moon | ![]() |
Luna 3 |
1960–1969
Date | Mission Success | Country/Organization | Mission Name |
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19 August 1960 | First plants and animals to return alive from Earth orbit | ![]() |
Sputnik 5 |
31 January 1961 | First Hominidae in space, first tasks performed in space; Ham (chimpanzee). | ![]() |
M-R 2 |
12 February 1961 | First launch from Earth orbit of upper stage into a heliocentric orbit First mid-course corrections First spin-stabilisation |
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Venera 1 |
12 April 1961 | First human spaceflight–(Yuri Gagarin) First human-crewed orbital flight |
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Vostok 1 |
5 May 1961 | First human-piloted space flight–(Alan Shepard) First human-crewed suborbital flight |
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Freedom 7 |
19 May 1961 | First planetary flyby (within 100,000 km of Venus - no data returned) | ![]() |
Venera 1 |
7 March 1962 | First orbital solar observatory | ![]() |
OSO-1 |
14 December 1962 | First successful planetary flyby (Venus closest approach 34,773 kilometers) | ![]() |
Mariner 2 |
16 June 1963 | First woman in space (Valentina Tereshkova) | ![]() |
Vostok 6 |
19 July 1963 | First reusable crewed spacecraft (suborbital) | ![]() |
X-15 Flight 90 |
18 March 1965 | First extra-vehicular activity-(Alexei Leonov) | ![]() |
Voskhod 2 |
14 July 1965 | First Mars flyby (closest approach 9,846 kilometers) | ![]() |
Mariner 4 |
14 July 1965 | First close-up photographs of another planet: Mars | ![]() |
Mariner 4 |
15 December 1965 | First orbital rendezvous (parallel flight, no docking) | ![]() |
Gemini 6A/Gemini 7 |
3 February 1966 | First soft landing on another world (the Moon) First photos from another world |
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Luna 9 |
1 March 1966 | First impact into another planet (Venus) | ![]() |
Venera 3 |
16 March 1966 | First orbital docking between two spacecraft | ![]() |
Gemini 8/Agena target vehicle |
3 April 1966 | First artificial satellite around another world (the Moon) | ![]() |
Luna 10 |
2 June 1966 | Soft landing on the Moon, photos from the Moon |
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Surveyor 1 |
30 October 1967 | First automated (crewless) docking | ![]() |
Cosmos 186/Cosmos 188 |
7 December 1968 | First orbital ultraviolet observatory | ![]() |
OAO-2 |
21 December 1968 | First piloted orbital mission of another celestial body (Moon), first-ever Trans-Earth injection (25 December) |
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Apollo 8 |
20 July 1969 | First human on the Moon and first space launch from a celestial body First sample return from the Moon |
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Apollo 11 |
August 4, 1969 | First photograph of Phobos from Space | ![]() |
Mariner 7 |
19 November 1969 | First rendezvous on the surface of a celestial body | ![]() |
Apollo 12/Surveyor 3 |
1970–1980
Date | Mission Success | Country/Organization | Mission Name |
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24 September 1970 | First automatic sample return from the Moon | ![]() |
Luna 16 |
17 November 1970 | First lunar rover | ![]() |
Lunokhod 1 |
12 December 1970 | First X-ray orbital observatory | ![]() |
Uhuru (satellite) |
15 December 1970 | First soft landing on another planet (Venus) First signals from another planet |
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Venera 7 |
19 April 1971 | First space station | ![]() |
Salyut 1 |
June 1971 | First Manned orbital observatory | ![]() |
Orion 1 |
14 November 1971 | First to maintain orbit around another planet (Mars) | ![]() |
Mariner 9 |
27 November 1971 | First impact into Mars | ![]() |
Mars 2 |
2 December 1971 | First soft Mars landing First signals from Mars surface |
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Mars 3 |
3 March 1972 | First human made object sent on escape trajectory away from the Sun | ![]() |
Pioneer 10 |
15 July 1972 | First mission to enter the asteroid belt and leave inner Solar System | ![]() |
Pioneer 10 |
15 November 1972 | First orbital gamma ray observatory | ![]() |
SAS 2 |
3 December 1973 | First Jupiter flyby (at 130,000 km) | ![]() |
Pioneer 10 |
5 February 1974 | Venus flyby at 5768 kilometers, first gravitational assist manoeuvre
First photograph of Venus from Space |
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Mariner 10 |
29 March 1974 | First Mercury flyby at 703 kilometers | ![]() |
Mariner 10 |
15 July 1975 | First multinational manned mission | ![]() ![]() |
Apollo-Soyuz Test Project |
20 October 1975 | First orbit around Venus | ![]() |
Venera 9 |
22 October 1975 | First photos from the surface of another planet (Venus) | ![]() |
Venera 9 |
17 April 1976 | Closest flyby of the Sun (43.432 million kilometers) Maximum speed record among spacecraft (252,792 km/h) |
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Helios 2 |
20 July 1976 | First photos and soil samples from the surface of Mars | ![]() |
Viking Lander |
26 January 1978 | First real time remotely operated ultraviolet orbital observatory | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
International Ultraviolet Explorer |
4 December 1978 | First extended (multi-year) orbital exploration of Venus from 1978 to 1992 | ![]() |
Pioneer Venus Orbiter |
5 March 1979 | Jupiter flyby (closest approach 349,000 km) encounters with Five Jovian moons, discovery of volcanism on Io |
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Voyager 1 |
1 September 1979 | First Saturn flyby at 21,000 km, first photographs of Titan from Space | ![]() |
Pioneer 11 |
12 November 1980 | Saturn flyby (closest approach 124,000 kilometers), close encounter of Titan and encounters with a dozen others. | ![]() |
Voyager 1 |
1981–present
Date | Mission Success | Country/Organization | Mission Name |
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12 April 1981 | First Reusable manned spacecraft (orbital) | ![]() |
STS-1 |
1 March 1982 | First Venus soil samples & sound recording of another world | ![]() |
Venera 13 |
25 January 1983 | First Infrared orbital observatory | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
IRAS |
13 June 1983 | First spacecraft beyond the orbit of Neptune (first spacecraft to pass beyond all Solar System planets) | ![]() |
Pioneer 10 |
7 February 1984 | First untethered spacewalk, Bruce McCandless II | ![]() |
STS-41-B |
24 January 1986 | First Uranus flyby (closest approach 81,500 kilometers) | ![]() |
Voyager 2 |
19 February 1986 | First consistently inhabited long-term research space station | ![]() |
Mir |
8 August 1989 | First astrometric satellite | ![]() |
Hipparcos |
25 August 1989 | First Neptune flyby (closest approach at 29,240 km) | ![]() |
Voyager 2 |
18 November 1989 | First orbital cosmic microwave observatory | ![]() |
COBE |
14 February 1990 | First photograph of the whole Solar System[2] | ![]() |
Voyager 1 |
24 April 1990 | Optical orbital observatory | ![]() ![]() |
Hubble Space Telescope |
15 September 1990 | Extended (multi-year) orbital exploration of Venus | ![]() |
Magellan |
21 October 1991 | First asteroid flyby (951 Gaspra closest approach 1,600 kilometers) | ![]() |
Galileo |
8 February 1992 | First polar orbit around the Sun | ![]() ![]() |
Ulysses |
22 March 1995 | Record longest duration spaceflight (437.7 days) set by Valeri Polyakov | ![]() |
Mir |
7 December 1995 | First orbit of Jupiter | ![]() |
Galileo |
7 December 1995 | First mission into the atmosphere of a gas giant (Jupiter) | ![]() |
Galileo's atmospheric entry probe |
12 February 1997 | First orbital radio observatory | ![]() |
HALCA |
4 July 1997 | First operational rover on another planet (Mars) | ![]() |
Mars Pathfinder |
20 November 1998 | First multinational space station, Largest man-made object built in space to date |
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International Space Station |
14 February 2000 | First orbiting of an asteroid (433 Eros) | ![]() ![]() |
NEAR Shoemaker |
12 February 2001 | First landing on an asteroid (433 Eros) | ![]() |
NEAR Shoemaker |
1 July 2004 | First orbit of Saturn | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Cassini–Huygens |
8 September 2004 | First sample return beyond lunar orbit (solar wind) | ![]() |
Genesis |
14 January 2005 | First soft landing on Titan | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Cassini–Huygens |
19 November 2005 | First asteroid ascent (25143 Itokawa) First interplanetary escape without undercarriage cutoff |
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Hayabusa |
15 January 2006 | First sample return from comet (81P/Wild) | ![]() |
Stardust |
6 March 2009 | Kepler Mission is launched, first space telescope designated to search for Earth-like exoplanets[3] | ![]() |
Kepler Mission |
13 June 2010 | First sample return from asteroid (25143 Itokawa) | ![]() |
Hayabusa |
18 March 2011 | First orbit of Mercury | ![]() |
MESSENGER |
16 July 2011 | First orbit of giant asteroid Vesta | ![]() |
Dawn |
25 August 2012 | First manmade probe in interstellar space. | ![]() |
Voyager 1 |
12 November 2014 | First man-made probe to make a planned and soft landing on a comet (67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko).[4] | ![]() |
Rosetta |
6 March 2015 | First orbit of dwarf planet (Ceres). First spacecraft to orbit two separate celestial bodies. |
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Dawn |
July 2015 | First flyby of dwarf planet (Pluto). Last original encounter with one of the nine major planets recognized in 1981. |
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New Horizons |
10 August 2015 | Lettuce was the first food eaten that was grown in space. | ![]() ![]() |
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1Project Vanguard was transferred from the NRL to NASA in late 1958.
See also
- Discovery and exploration of the Solar System
- Timeline of Solar System exploration
- Timeline of artificial satellites and space probes
- Timeline of space travel by nationality
References
- ↑ Dornberger, Walter (1954) [1952]. V-2. New York: Viking Press. pp. 17,256–7.
- ↑ See under "Extended Mission"
- ↑ NASA launches Kepler Mission: Search for Earth-like worlds
- ↑ Chang, Kenneth (Nov 12, 2014). "European Space Agency’s Spacecraft Lands on Comet’s Surface". The New York Times. Retrieved Nov 12, 2014.
External links
- Chronology of Space Exploration archive of important space exploration missions and events, including future planned and proposed endeavors
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