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2006 in spaceflight

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Launch of New Horizons, the first probe to Pluto, on the first Atlas V 551
Fact Sheet
Orbital Launches
First 19 January
Last 27 December
Total 66 or 67
Successes 62
Failures 4 or 5
Partial Failures 0
Catalogued 63
National Firsts
Satellite  Kazakhstan
Space Traveller  Brazil
 Iran
 Sweden
Rockets
Maiden Flights Atlas V 411
Atlas V 551
Long March 4B-II (4C)
Falcon 1
H-IIA 204
Soyuz-2.1b
Retirements Tsyklon-2
M-V
Manned flights
Orbital 5
Total travellers 26


[edit] Launches

Date/Time (UTC) Rocket Launch site LSP
Payload Operator Orbit Function Decay (UTC) Outcome
Remarks

[edit] January

19 January
19:00:00
Flag of the United StatesAtlas V 551 Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-41 Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesInternational Launch Services
Flag of the United StatesNew Horizons NASA Galactocentric Pluto flyby In orbit Operational
Maiden flight of Atlas V 551, will explore Pluto and the Kuiper belt, first spacecraft planned to visit Pluto
18 January
11:48[1]
Flag of the Republic of ChinaSounding Rocket V Flag of the Republic of ChinaJiu Peng Flag of the Republic of ChinaNSPO
NSPO/NCU Suborbital Ionospheric 11:57 Successful
Apogee: 282 kilometres (175 mi)
22 January
04:00
Flag of JapanS-310 Flag of JapanUchinoura Flag of JapanJAXA
Flag of JapanFuroshiki JAXA Suborbital Technology 22 January Successful
Apogee: 130 kilometres (81 mi)
24 January
01:33
Flag of JapanH-IIA 2022 Flag of JapanTanegashima LA-Y1 Flag of Japan JAXA[4]
Flag of JapanDaichi (ALOS) JAXA Sun-synchronous Remote Sensing In orbit Partial spacecraft failure
Operational
Poor quality images returned due to attitude control and noise problems[2] was resolved by software adjustment.[3]

[edit] February

6 February Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaDong Feng 21 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaXichang Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaPLA
PLA Suborbital ASAT 6 February Spacecraft failure
Apogee: 800 kilometres (500 mi), missed satellite
8 February
18:47
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesMOSES Suborbital Solar 8 February Successful
Apogee: 282 kilometres (175 mi)
15 February
23:34:55
Flag of UkraineZenit-3SL Flag of NorwayOcean Odyssey Flag of the United NationsSea Launch
Flag of the United StatesEchoStar 10 EchoStar Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
16 February
08:01
Flag of the United StatesLGM-30G Minuteman III Flag of the United StatesVandenberg LF-10 Flag of the United StatesUS Air Force
Flag of the United StatesSERV-3 US Air Force Suborbital Missile test 16 February Successful
Apogee: 1,300 kilometres (810 mi)
18 February
06:27
Flag of JapanH-IIA 2024 Flag of JapanTanegashima LA-Y1 Flag of JapanRSC[5][6]
Flag of JapanMTSAT-2 MILT/JMA Geosynchronous ATC/Weather In orbit Operational
Last launch conducted by RSC
21 February
21:28:00
Flag of JapanM-V Flag of JapanUchinoura Flag of JapanJAXA
Flag of JapanAkari (ASTRO-F) JAXA Sun-synchronous IR astronomy In orbit Operational
Flag of JapanCute-1.7+APD TiTech Low Earth Amateur radio In orbit Operational
Cute-1.7+APD is a 2U CubeSat
23 February
16:09
Flag of the United StatesUGM-27 Polaris (STARS) Flag of the United StatesKodiak Flag of the United StatesSandia
Flag of the United StatesFT-03-1 Suborbital Target In orbit Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
28 February
20:10:00
Flag of RussiaProton-M/Briz-M Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 200/39 Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesInternational Launch Services
Flag of Saudi ArabiaArabsat 4A Arabsat Intended: Geosynchronous
Achieved: Medium Earth
Communications 24 March[7] Launch failure
Upper stage malfunction left payload in useless orbit, deorbited after attempts to raise orbit failed

[edit] March

8 March
08:45
Flag of the United StatesRIM-161 Standard Missile 3 Flag of the United StatesUSS Lake Erie, PMRF Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
Flag of the United StatesFlag of JapanJCTV-1 US Navy/MDA/JMSDF Suborbital Missile test In orbit Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
11 March
22:33
Flag of EuropeAriane 5ECA Flag of FranceKourou ELA-3 Flag of FranceArianespace
Flag of SpainSpainSat-1 Hisdesat Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Flag of FranceHot Bird 7A Eutelsat Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
22 March
14:03
Flag of the United StatesPegasus-XL Flag of the United StatesStargazer, Vandenberg Flag of the United StatesOrbital Sciences
Flag of the United StatesST-5A NASA Low Earth Technology In orbit Successful
Flag of the United StatesST-5B NASA Low Earth Technology In orbit Successful
Flag of the United StatesST-5C NASA Low Earth Technology In orbit Successful
All three satellites deactivated on 30 June
24 March
22:30
Flag of the United StatesFalcon 1 Flag of the Marshall IslandsOmelek Flag of the United StatesSpaceX
Flag of the United StatesFalconSat 2 USAF Academy Intended: Low Earth Plasma research T+60 seconds Launch failure
Maiden flight of Falcon 1, rocket lost power shortly after launch due to engine fire caused by corrosion of a nut on a fuel line.
25 March
03:15
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of AustraliaWoomera LA-2 Flag of AustraliaQueensland
Flag of AustraliaHyshot-3 Queensland Suborbital Hypersonic research 03:25 Successful
Apogee: 325 kilometres (202 mi)
30 March
02:30:20
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-FG Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 1/5 Flag of RussiaRoskosmos
Flag of RussiaSoyuz TMA-8 Roskosmos Low Earth (ISS) ISS Expedition 13 29 September
01:13
Successful
Manned orbital flight with 3 cosmonauts, first Brazilian in space
30 March
02:40
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of AustraliaWoomera LA-2 Flag of AustraliaQueensland
Flag of AustraliaFlag of JapanHyshot-4 Queensland/JAXA Suborbital Hypersonic research 30 March Launch failure
Apogee: 290 kilometres (180 mi), nosecone failed to separate

[edit] April

7 April
13:00
Flag of the United StatesLGM-30G Minuteman III Flag of the United StatesVandenberg LF-26 Flag of the United StatesUS Air Force
Flag of the United StatesGT-190GM US Air Force Suborbital Missile test 7 April Successful
Long-range test, aimed at Guam, apogee: 1,300 kilometres (810 mi)
12 April
18:10
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesEUNIS NASA Suborbital Solar 12 April Successful
Apogee: 318 kilometres (198 mi)
12 April
23:29:59
Flag of UkraineZenit-3SL Flag of NorwayOcean Odyssey Flag of the United NationsSea Launch
Flag of JapanJCSAT-9 JCSAT Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
13 April Flag of the United StatesSR19-SR19 Flag of the United StatesPMRF Flag of the United StatesSandia
Flag of the United StatesFTC-02B MDA Suborbital Target 13 April Successful
Apogee: 200 kilometres (120 mi)
15 April
01:40:00
Flag of the United StatesMinotaur I Flag of the United StatesVandenberg SLC-8 Flag of the United StatesOrbital Sciences
Flag of the United StatesFlag of the Republic of ChinaCOSMIC-FM1 (FORMOSAT-3A) NASA/NSPO Low Earth Atmospheric In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesFlag of the Republic of ChinaCOSMIC-FM2 (FORMOSAT-3B) NASA/NSPO Low Earth Atmospheric In orbit Partial spacecraft failure
Operational
Flag of the United StatesFlag of the Republic of ChinaCOSMIC-FM3 (FORMOSAT-3C) NASA/NSPO Low Earth Atmospheric In orbit Partial spacecraft failure
Operational
Flag of the United StatesFlag of the Republic of ChinaCOSMIC-FM4 (FORMOSAT-3D) NASA/NSPO Low Earth Atmospheric In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesFlag of the Republic of ChinaCOSMIC-FM5 (FORMOSAT-3E) NASA/NSPO Low Earth Atmospheric In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesFlag of the Republic of ChinaCOSMIC-FM6 (FORMOSAT-3F) NASA/NSPO Low Earth Atmospheric In orbit Operational
Power system and solar panel malfunctions on FM2 and FM3, control issues with FM6 during 2007
20 April
20:27:00
Flag of the United StatesAtlas V 411 Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-41 Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesInternational Launch Services
Flag of LuxembourgAstra 1KR SES Astra Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Maiden flight of Atlas V 411, final ILS Atlas launch
22 April
16:40
Flag of RussiaKosmos-3MR Flag of RussiaKapustin Yar Site 107/1 Flag of RussiaRVSN
Flag of RussiaPBS-2 RVSN Suborbital REV test 22 April Successful
Apogee: 675 kilometres (419 mi)
24 April
16:03:25
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-U Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 1/5 Flag of RussiaRoskosmos
Flag of RussiaProgress M-56 Roskosmos Low Earth (ISS) Logistics 18 September Successful
ISS flight 21P
25 April
16:47:16
Flag of RussiaStart-1 Flag of RussiaSvobodny Site 5 Flag of RussiaUnited Start
Flag of IsraelEROS-B ImageSat Low Earth (polar) Imaging In orbit Operational
Final launch from Svobodny Cosmodrome
26 April
22:48
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaLong March 4B-II (4C) Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaTaiyuan LA-1 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaCNSA
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaYaogan 1 CAST Low Earth Imaging In orbit Operational
Maiden flight of Long March 4B-II, redesignated Long March 4C by November 2007
28 April
10:02:16
Flag of the United StatesDelta II 7420-10C Flag of the United StatesVandenberg SLC-2W Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesFlag of FranceCALIPSO NASA/CNES Sun-synchronous Climatology In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesCloudSat NASA Sun-synchronous Climatology In orbit Operational
Both satellites part of the A-train constellation, spacecraft study aerosols and clouds respectively
28 April Flag of the United StatesSR19-SR19 Flag of the United StatesPMRF Flag of the United StatesSandia
Flag of the United StatesFTC-02 MDA Suborbital Target 28 April Successful
Apogee: 200 kilometres (120 mi)
29 April Flag of PakistanShaheen-II Flag of PakistanSonmiani Flag of PakistanArmy of Pakistan
Army of Pakistan Suborbital Target 29 April Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi)

[edit] May

2 May
06:16
Flag of the United StatesMaxus (Castor 4B) Flag of SwedenEsrange Flag of EuropeEuroLaunch
Flag of EuropeFlag of SwedenMAXUS 9 ESA/SSC Suborbital Microgravity 2 May Successful
Apogee: 702 kilometres (436 mi)
3 May
17:38
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-U Flag of RussiaPlesetsk Site 16/2 Flag of RussiaRVSN
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2420 (Kobal't-M) VKS Low Earth Optical imaging In orbit Operational
10 May
08:12
Flag of BrazilVSB-30 Flag of SwedenEsrange Flag of EuropeEuroLaunch
Flag of GermanyFlag of SwedenTEXUS-43 DLR/SSC Suborbital Microgravity 10 May Successful
Apogee: 237 kilometres (147 mi)
11 May Flag of the United StatesTHAAD Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands Flag of the United StatesUS Army
Flag of the United StatesFTT-02 MDA Suborbital ABM test 11 May Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi), simulated intercept
22 May
09:30
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesACS NASA Suborbital Test 22 May Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
22 May Flag of IranShahab-3 Flag of IranShahrood Flag of IranIRG
IRG Suborbital Missile test 22 May Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
24 May
22:11:00
Flag of the United StatesDelta IV-M+ (4,2) Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-37B Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesGOES-13 (GOES-N) NASA/NOAA Geostationary Weather In orbit Operational
26 May
18:50
Flag of RussiaShtil' Flag of RussiaK-84 Ekaterinburg, Barents Sea Flag of RussiaVMF
Flag of RussiaKompass 2 Roskosmos Low Earth Earthquake detection In orbit Partial spacecraft failure
Operational
Control and power problems made satellite unusable. Written off on 29 May 2006. Problems cleared by November, and satellite re-activated.[8]
27 May
21:09
Flag of EuropeAriane 5ECA Flag of FranceKourou ELA-3 Flag of FranceArianespace
Flag of MexicoSatmex 6 SatMex Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Flag of ThailandThaicom 5 Shin Satellite Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Record for heaviest dual-payload to geosynchronous transfer orbit, stood until May 2007

[edit] June

5 June
16:05
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands Flag of the United StatesNASA
NAWC Suborbital Target 5 June Successful
Apogee: 130 kilometres (81 mi)
7 June
22:00
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of the United StatesPMRF Flag of the United StatesNASA
NAWC Suborbital Target 7 June Successful
Apogee: 130 kilometres (81 mi)
8 June
16:00
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesDUNDEE NAWC Suborbital Target 8 June Successful
Apogee: 130 kilometres (81 mi)
14 June
08:22
Flag of the United StatesLGM-30G Minuteman III Flag of the United StatesVandenberg LF-04 Flag of the United StatesUS Air Force
Flag of the United StatesGT-191GM US Air Force Suborbital Missile test 14 June Successful
Carried three Mk. 21 re-entry vehicles, Apogee: 1,300 kilometres (810 mi)
15 June
08:00:00
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-U Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 1/5 Flag of RussiaRoskosmos
Flag of RussiaResurs-DK-1 Roskosmos Low Earth Remote sensing In orbit Operational
17 June
22:44:05
Flag of RussiaProton-K/DM-3 Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 200/39 Flag of RussiaKhrunichev
Flag of KazakhstanKazSat-1 JSC KazSat Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Spacecraft failure
First Kazakh satellite, satellite suffered control problems and was unusable by October 2008
18 June
07:50
Flag of UkraineZenit-3SL Flag of NorwayOcean Odyssey Flag of the United NationsSea Launch
Flag of the United StatesGalaxy 16 Intelsat Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Launched for PanAmSat, transferred to Intelsat before entry into service due to merger
21 June
22:15
Flag of the United StatesDelta II 7925 Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-17A Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesUSA-187 (MiTEx-A) US Air Force/DARPA Geostationary Technology In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesUSA-188 (MiTEx-B) US Air Force/DARPA Geostationary Technology In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesUSA-189 (MiTEx Carrier) NRL/DARPA Geostationary Technology In orbit Operational
22 June
22:00
Flag of the United StatesMRT (Castor 4B) Flag of the United StatesPMRT Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
Flag of the United StatesFTM-10 Target US Navy/MDA Suborbital Target 22 June Successful
Intercepted by SM-3, apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
22 June
22:04
Flag of the United StatesRIM-161 Standard Missile 3 Flag of the United StatesUSS Shiloh, PMRF Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
Flag of the United StatesFTM-10 US Navy/MDA Suborbital ABM test 22 June Successful
Intercepted MRT, apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
23 June
23:02
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of the United StatesPMRF Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesTRACKEX NAWC/MDA Suborbital Target 23 June Successful
Apogee: 130 kilometres (81 mi)
24 June
15:08:18
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-U Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 1/5 Flag of RussiaRoskosmos
Flag of RussiaProgress M-57 Roskosmos Low Earth (ISS) Logistics 17 January 2007 Successful
ISS flight 22P
25 June
04:00
Flag of RussiaTsyklon-2 Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 90/20 Flag of RussiaVKS
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2421 (US-PU) VMF Low Earth ELINT 20 March 2008 Partial spacecraft failure
Final flight of Tsyklon-2 rocket. One of satellite's solar panels failed to deploy[9], ceased operations in February or March 2008 and destroyed in orbit on 20 March. Spacecraft carried KONUS-A gamma-ray astronomy experiment for Roskosmos
28 June
03:30:00
Flag of the United StatesDelta IV-M+ (4,2) Flag of the United StatesVandenberg SLC-6 Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesUSA-184 (Prowler) NRO Molniya ELINT In orbit Operational
First EELV launch from Vandenberg, carried SBIRS-HEO-1 and TWINS-A experiments for the US Air Force and NASA respectively, NRO Launch 22
30 June
06:25
Flag of RussiaR-29RMU Sineva Flag of RussiaK-84 Ekaterinburg, Barents Sea Flag of RussiaVMF
VMF Suborbital Missile test 30 June Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)

[edit] July

1 July
06:39
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of NorwayAndøya Flag of the United StatesAndøya/NASA
Flag of the United States/Flag of NorwaySPIRIT-III ESPRIT Suborbital Ionospheric
Plasma research
1 July Successful
Apogee: 200 kilometres (120 mi)
1 July
06:39
Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of NorwayAndøya Flag of NorwayAndøya
Flag of NorwayHotPay-1 Andøya Suborbital Aeronomy 1 July Launch failure
Apogee: 40 kilometres (25 mi)
4 July
18:32
Flag of North KoreaHwasong-6 Flag of North KoreaKittaeryong Flag of North KoreaKPA
KPA Suborbital Missile test 4 July Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi), first of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
4 July
18:37:55
Flag of the United StatesSpace Shuttle Discovery Flag of the United StatesKennedy LC-39B Flag of the United StatesUnited Space Alliance
Flag of the United StatesSTS-121 NASA Low Earth (ISS) ISS assembly 17 July
13:14
Successful
Flag of ItalyFlag of the United StatesLeonardo MPLM ASI/NASA Low Earth (ISS) Logistics Successful
Manned flight with 7 astronauts, second Return to Flight mission after Columbia accident
4 July
19:04
Flag of North KoreaRodong-1 Flag of North KoreaKittaeryong Flag of North KoreaKPA
KPA Suborbital Missile test 4 July Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi), second of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
4 July
20:01
Flag of North KoreaTaepodong-2 Flag of North KoreaMusudan-ri Flag of North KoreaKPA
Flag of North KoreaGwangmyeongseong-2 KPA Intended: Low Earth
(unconfirmed)
Weather +42 seconds Launch failure
Maiden flight of Taepodong-2, North Korea claimed flight was an orbital launch attempt, but it was unclear if this was a cover for a suborbital missile test, rocket failed shortly after launch, reaching an apogee of 4 kilometres (2.5 mi), third of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
4 July
22:31
Flag of North KoreaRodong-1 Flag of North KoreaKittaeryong Flag of North KoreaKPA
KPA Suborbital Missile test 4 July Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi), fourth of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
4 July
22:12
Flag of North KoreaHwasong-6 Flag of North KoreaKittaeryong Flag of North KoreaKPA
KPA Suborbital Missile test 4 July Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi), fifth of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
4 July
23:20
Flag of North KoreaRodong-1 Flag of North KoreaKittaeryong Flag of North KoreaKPA
KPA Suborbital Missile test 4 July Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi), sixth of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
5 July
08:20
Flag of North KoreaRodong-1 Flag of North KoreaKittaeryong Flag of North KoreaKPA
KPA Suborbital Missile test 5 July Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi), last of seven North Korean launches in fourteen hours
9 July
05:33
Flag of IndiaAgni III Flag of IndiaIntegrated Test Range LC-4 Flag of IndiaDRDO
DRDO Suborbital Missile test 9 July Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi)
10 July
12:08
Flag of IndiaGSLV Flag of IndiaSatish Dhawan Flag of IndiaISRO
Flag of IndiaINSAT 4C ISRO Intended: Geostationary Communications T+60 seconds Launch failure
Loss of control due to LRB engine failure, self-destructed 60 seconds into flight
12 July
11:17
Flag of the United StatesHera Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands Flag of the United StatesUS Army
Flag of the United StatesFFT-4 Target US Army/MDA Suborbital Target 12 July Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi), Intercepted after reentry by endoatmospheric THAAD launched at 11:20
12 July
14:53:36
Flag of UkraineDnepr-1 Flag of RussiaDombarovskiy Flag of RussiaISC Kosmotras
Flag of the United StatesGenesis I Bigelow Low Earth Technology In orbit Operational
First unmanned prototype of a commercial space station module
21 July
10:14
Flag of the United StatesLGM-30G Minuteman III Flag of the United StatesVandenberg LF-09 Flag of the United StatesUS Air Force
Flag of the United StatesGT-192GM US Air Force Suborbital Missile test 21 July Successful
Carried three Mk.21 reentry vehicles, apogee: 1,300 kilometres (810 mi)
21 July
04:20:03
Flag of RussiaMolniya-M Flag of RussiaPlesetsk Site 16/2 Flag of RussiaVKS
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2422 (Oko) VKS Molniya Missile defence In orbit Operational
26 July
19:43:05
Flag of UkraineDnepr-1 Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 109/95 Flag of RussiaISC Kosmotras
Flag of BelarusBelKA NAS Intended: Low Earth Observation T+74 seconds Launch failure
Flag of ItalyUnisat-4 Sapienza Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of RussiaBaumanets Roskosmos Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of ItalyPicPot POLITIO Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesFlag of FranceSACRED Arizona
Montpelier
Alcatel
Intended: Low Earth Radiation
Flag of the United StatesION Illinois Intended: Low Earth Technology
Ionospheric
Flag of the United StatesRincon 1 Arizona Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesICECube-1 Cornell Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesKUTESat Pathfinder Kansas Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of JapanSEEDS Nichidai Intended: Low Earth Amateur radio
Flag of NorwaynCube-1 NSSP Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of South KoreaHAUSAT-1 HAU Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesMEROPE Montana Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesCP2 CalPoly Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesAeroCube-1 Aerospace Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesCP1 CalPoly Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesMea Huaka'i (Voyager) Hawaii Intended: Low Earth Technology
Flag of the United StatesICECube-2 Cornell Intended: Low Earth Technology
First-stage engine hydraulic pump failure, thrust termination system activated
28 July
07:05:43
Flag of RussiaRokot/Briz-KM Flag of RussiaPlesetsk Site 133/3 Flag of EuropeFlag of RussiaEurockot
Flag of South KoreaArirang-2 (KOMPSAT-2) KARI Low Earth Earth Observation In orbit Operational

[edit] August

3 August
10:38
Flag of RussiaRT-2PM Topol (RS-12M) Flag of RussiaPlesetsk Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesRVSN
RVSN Suborbital Missile test 11:04 Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi), impacted Kura Test Range
4 August
21:48:00
Flag of RussiaProton-M/Briz-M Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 200/39 Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesInternational Launch Services
Flag of EuropeHot Bird 8 Eutelsat Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
11 August
22:15
Flag of EuropeAriane 5ECA Flag of FranceKourou ELA-3 Flag of FranceArianespace
Flag of JapanJCSat 10 JSAT Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Flag of FranceSyracuse 3B DGA Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
21 August
14:30
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
MDA Suborbital Target 21 August Successful
Apogee: 380 kilometres (240 mi)
22 August
03:27:01
Flag of UkraineZenit-3SL Flag of NorwayOcean Odyssey Flag of the United NationsSea Launch
Flag of South KoreaKoreasat 5 KT/ADD Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
25 August
14:30
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
MDA Suborbital Target 21 August Successful
Apogee: 382 kilometres (237 mi), THAAD target

[edit] September

1 September
17:22
Flag of the United StatesUGM-27 Polaris (STARS) Flag of the United StatesKodiak Flag of the United StatesSandia
Flag of the United StatesGMD FTG-02 target MDA Suborbital Target 1 September Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi), intercepted by GBI
1 September
17:39
Flag of the United StatesOrbital Boost Vehicle Flag of the United StatesVandenberg LF-23 Flag of the United StatesOrbital Sciences/MDA
Flag of the United StatesGMD FTG-02 MDA Suborbital ABM test 1 September Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi), intercepted STARS
4 September Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaDong Feng 31 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaTaiyuan Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaPLA
PLA Suborbital Missile test 4 September Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
7 September
15:50
Flag of RussiaRSM-56 Bulava (R-30) Flag of RussiaRFS Dmitriy Donskoy, White Sea Flag of RussiaVMF
VMF Suborbital Missile test 7 September Launch failure
Apogee: 1 kilometre (0.62 mi), first stage malfunction
9 September
07:00
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaLong March 2C Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaJiuquan LA-4/SLS-2 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaCNSA
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaShi Jian 8 CASC Low Earth Biological 24 September
02:43
Successful
Investigated exposure of seeds to microgravity and radiation, spacecraft recovered after reentry
9 September
11:20
Flag of RussiaR-29RMU Sineva Flag of RussiaK-84 Ekaterinburg, North Pole Flag of RussiaVMF
VMF Suborbital Missile test 9 September Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
9 September
15:14:55
Flag of the United StatesSpace Shuttle Atlantis Flag of the United StatesKennedy LC-39B Flag of the United StatesUnited Space Alliance
Flag of the United StatesSTS-115 NASA Low Earth (ISS) ISS assembly 21 September
10:21
Successful
Flag of the United NationsITS P3/4 Truss NASA Low Earth (ISS) ISS component In orbit Operational
Manned orbital flight with 6 astronauts, first ISS assembly mission since 2002
9 September
22:17:00
Flag of the United StatesNike-Orion Flag of NorwayAndøya Flag of NorwayAndøya
Flag of NorwayFlag of GermanyECOMA-1 Andøya/DLR Suborbital Atmospheric 9 September Successful
Apogee: 130 kilometres (81 mi)
10 September
14:50
Flag of RussiaR-29R Volna Flag of RussiaK-433 Svyaity Georgiy, Simushir Flag of RussiaVMF
VMF Suborbital Missile test 10 September Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
11 September
04:35
Flag of JapanH-IIA 202 Flag of JapanTanegashima LA-Y1 Flag of JapanJAXA
Flag of JapanIGS-3A CSICE Low Earth Optical imaging In orbit Operational
12 September
16:02
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaLong March 3A Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaTaiyuan LA-1 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaCNSC
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaChinaSat 22A ChinaSat Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
13 September
10:30
Flag of the United StatesHera Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands Flag of the United StatesUS Army
Flag of the United StatesFFT-5 Target US Army/MDA Suborbital Target 13 September Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi), THAAD target
14 September
13:41:00
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-U Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 31/6 Flag of RussiaVKS
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2423 (Don) VKS Low Earth Optical imaging 17 November Successful
Ceased operations on 14 November, self-destructed 3 days later
17 September
21:06:46
Flag of the United StatesNike-Orion Flag of NorwayAndøya Flag of NorwayAndøya
Flag of NorwayFlag of GermanyECOMA-2 Andøya/DLR Suborbital Atmospheric 17 September Successful
Apogee: 129 kilometres (80 mi)
18 September
04:08:42
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-FG Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 1/5 Flag of RussiaRoskosmos
Flag of RussiaSoyuz TMA-9 Roskosmos Low Earth (ISS) ISS Expedition 14 21 April 2007
12:31
Successful
Manned orbital flight with 3 cosmonauts including the first female space tourist and Iranian-born space traveller
22 September
21:36:00
Flag of JapanM-V Flag of JapanUchinoura Flag of JapanJAXA
Flag of JapanHinode (SOLAR-B) JAXA Sun-synchronous Solar In orbit Operational
Flag of JapanHIT-SAT HIT Low Earth Technology 18 June 2008
08:48
Successful
Flag of JapanSSSAT JAXA Solar sail 26 September Spacecraft failure
Final flight of M-V rocket and Mu family, SSSat failed to establish communications with ground[10]
23 September
15:17:54
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant XI Flag of the United StatesWallops Island Flag of the United StatesNASA
NASA Suborbital Test 23 September Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi)
25 September
18:50
Flag of the United StatesDelta II 7925 Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-17A Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesUSA-190 (GPS IIR-15/M2) US Air Force Medium Earth Navigation In orbit Operational
25 September
20:14
Flag of the United StatesSpaceLoft XL Flag of the United StatesSpaceport America Flag of the United StatesUP Aerospace
Various Suborbital Various T+60 seconds Launch failure
Maiden flight of SpaceLoft XL sounding rocket, first flight from Spaceport America, rocket went out of control and failed to reach space, apogee: 12 kilometres (7.5 mi)

[edit] October

13 October
20:56
Flag of EuropeAriane 5ECA Flag of FranceKourou ELA-3 Flag of FranceArianespace
Flag of the United StatesDirecTV-9S DirecTV Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Flag of AustraliaOptus D1 Optus Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Flag of JapanLDREX-2 JAXA Geosynchronous transfer Technology In orbit Operational
19 October
16:28:13
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-2.1a/Fregat Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 31/6 Flag of EuropeFlag of RussiaStarsem
Flag of EuropeMetOp-A EUMETSAT Sun-synchronous Weather In orbit Operational
Maiden flight of Soyuz-2.1a/Fregat
23 October
13:40:36
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-U Flag of RussiaBaikonur Site 1/5 Flag of RussiaRoskosmos
Flag of RussiaProgress M-58 Roskosmos Low Earth (ISS) Logistics 27 March 2007
22:44
Successful
ISS flight 23P, antenna stowage issues on 26 October initially prevented full mechanical docking, second attempt was successful.
23 October
23:34
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaLong March 4B Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaTaiyuan LA-1 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaCNSA
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaShi Jian 6-2A CASC Low Earth Environmental In orbit Operational
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaShi Jian 6-2B CASC Low Earth Environmental In orbit Operational
25 October
13:05
Flag of RussiaRSM-56 Bulava (R-30) Flag of RussiaRFS Dmitriy Donskoy, Beloye More Flag of RussiaVMF
VMF Suborbital Missile test 25 October Launch failure
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi), first stage malfunction
26 October
00:52:00
Flag of the United StatesDelta II 7925 Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-17B Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesSTEREO-A NASA Heliocentric Solar In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesSTEREO-B NASA Heliocentric Solar In orbit Operational
28 October
16:20
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaLong March 3B Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaXichang LA-2 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaCASC
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaSinosat-2 Sinosat Intended: Geosynchronous
Achieved: Subsynchronous
Communications In orbit Spacecraft failure
Solar panels and communications antenna failed to deploy
28 October
17:58:00
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesLASP Suborbital Solar 28 October Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi)
30 October
23:48:59
Flag of UkraineZenit-3SL Flag of NorwayOcean Odyssey Flag of the United NationsSea Launch
Flag of the United StatesXM-4 "Blues" XM Satellite Radio Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational

[edit] November

2 November Flag of IranShahab-3 Flag of IranShahrood Flag of IranIRG
IRG Suborbital Missile test 2 November Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
4 November
13:53
Flag of the United StatesDelta IV-M Flag of the United StatesVandenberg SLC-6 Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesUSA-191 (DMSP F17) US Air Force/NOAA Sun-synchronous Weather In orbit Operational
7 November
19:30
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesUSC-7 Suborbital Solar 7 November Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi)
8 November
20:01:00
Flag of RussiaProton-M/Briz-M Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 200/39 Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesInternational Launch Services
Flag of Saudi ArabiaBadr-4 (ARABSAT 4B) ARABSAT Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
9 November
08:51
Flag of FranceM51 Flag of FranceBiscarosse Flag of FranceFrench Navy
French Navy Suborbital Missile test 9 November Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
9 November
11:35
Flag of RussiaUR-100NU Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 175/2 Flag of RussiaRVSN
RVSN Suborbital Missile test 9 November Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
16 November Flag of the United StatesTerrier-Orion Flag of the United StatesPMRF Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
Flag of the United StatesARAV-B US Navy Suborbital Target 16 November Successful
Apogee: 150 kilometres (93 mi)
16 November Flag of PakistanGhauri Flag of PakistanTilla Flag of PakistanArmy of Pakistan
Flag of PakistanHaft-5 Army of Pakistan Suborbital Missile test 16 November Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi)
17 November
19:12:00
Flag of the United StatesDelta II 7925 Flag of the United StatesCape Canaveral LC-17A Flag of the United StatesBoeing IDS
Flag of the United StatesUSA-192 (GPS IIR-16/M3) US Air Force Medium Earth Navigation In orbit Operational
21 November
02:00
Flag of CanadaBlack Brant IX Flag of the United StatesWhite Sands LC-36 Flag of the United StatesNASA
Flag of the United StatesCyXESS Suborbital XR Astronomy 21 November Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi)
21 November Flag of the United StatesUGM-133 Trident II (D5) Flag of the United StatesUSS Maryland, ETR Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
US Navy Suborbital Missile test 21 November Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
21 November Flag of the United StatesUGM-133 Trident II (D5) Flag of the United StatesUSS Maryland, ETR Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
US Navy Suborbital Missile test 21 November Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
26 November Flag of IndiaPrithvi Flag of IndiaIntegrated Test Range LC-3 Flag of IndiaDRDO
DRDO Suborbital Missile test 26 November Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi)
27 November
04:45
Flag of IndiaPrithvi Flag of IndiaIntegrated Test Range LC-3 Flag of IndiaDRDO
DRDO Suborbital Target 27 November Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi), intercepted by another Prithvi
27 November
04:46
Flag of IndiaPrithvi Flag of IndiaIntegrated Test Range LC-4 Flag of IndiaDRDO
DRDO Suborbital ABM test 27 November Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi), intercepted another Prithvi
29 November Flag of PakistanShaheen-I Flag of PakistanSonmiani Flag of PakistanArmy of Pakistan
Flag of PakistanHaft-4 Army of Pakistan Suborbital Target 29 November Successful
Apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi)

[edit] December

7 December Flag of the United StatesAries Flag of the United StatesPMRF Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
Flag of the United StatesFTM-11 Target US Navy/MDA Suborbital Target 7 December Successful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi), AEGIS target
8 December
00:53
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaLong March 3A Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaXichang LA-2 Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaCASC
Flag of the People's Republic of ChinaFeng Yun 2D CMA Geosynchronous Weather In orbit Operational
8 December
22:08
Flag of EuropeAriane 5ECA Flag of FranceKourou ELA-3 Flag of FranceArianespace
Flag of the United StatesWildBlue 1 WildBlue Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesAMC-18 SES Americom Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
10 December
01:47:35
Flag of the United StatesSpace Shuttle Discovery Flag of the United StatesKennedy Space Center LC-39B Flag of the United StatesUnited Space Alliance
Flag of the United StatesSTS-116 NASA Low Earth (ISS) ISS assembly 22 December
22:32
Successful
Flag of the United StatesSpacehab LSM NASA Low Earth (STS) Logistics Successful
Flag of the United NationsITS P5 Truss NASA Low Earth (ISS) ISS component In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesANDE-MAA US Naval Academy Low Earth Technology 9 February 2007 Partial spacecraft failure
Flag of the United StatesANDE-FACL US Naval Academy Low Earth Technology 9 February 2007 Successful
Flag of the United StatesRAFT1 US Naval Academy Low Earth Calibration In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesMARScom (NMARS) US Naval Academy Low Earth Calibration In orbit Operational
Flag of the United StatesMEPSI-2 DARPA Low Earth Technology 8 March 2007 Successful
Manned orbital flight with 7 astronauts, including the first Swedish space traveller; ISS crew exchange.
ANDE-MAA failed to deploy after becoming stuck in launch canister, but still transmitted data; RAFT1, MARScom, and MEPSI-2 were cubesats.
11 December
23:28:43
Flag of RussiaProton-M/Briz-M Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 200/39 Flag of RussiaFlag of the United StatesInternational Launch Services
Flag of MalaysiaMEASAT-3 MEASAT Geosynchronous Communications In orbit Operational
14 December
21:00:00
Flag of the United StatesDelta II 7920-10 Flag of the United StatesVandenberg SLC-2W Flag of the United StatesUnited Launch Alliance
Flag of the United StatesUSA-193 NRO Low Earth Radar imaging
Technology
(unconfirmed)
21 February 2008
03:29
Spacecraft failure
NRO Launch 21, first launch to be conducted by United Launch Alliance. Satellite failed to contract ground, destroyed by SM-3 ASAT on 21 February 2008.
16 December
12:00:00
Flag of the United StatesMinotaur I Flag of the United StatesMARS LP-0B Flag of the United StatesOrbital Sciences
Flag of the United StatesTacSat 2 NRL Low Earth Optical imaging
Technology
In orbit Partial spacecraft failure
Flag of the United StatesGeneSat NASA Low Earth Biological In orbit Operational
First launch from Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport. Little or no imagery returned by TacSat due to politial dispute. TacSat lost contact with ground in January 2008.
18 December
06:32
Flag of JapanH-IIA 204 Flag of JapanTanegashima LA-Y1 JAXA
Flag of JapanKiku-8 (ETS-VIII) JAXA Geosynchronous Technology In orbit Operational
Maiden flight of H-IIA 204, full spacecraft antenna deployment one day late[11]
19 December
14:00:19
Flag of RussiaKosmos-3M Flag of RussiaPlesetsk Site 132/1 Flag of GermanyFlag of RussiaCOSMOS International
Flag of GermanySAR-Lupe 1 Bundeswehr Low Earth Radar imaging In orbit Operational
24 December
08:34:44
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-2.1a/Fregat Flag of RussiaPlesetsk Site 43/4 Flag of RussiaVKS
Flag of RussiaMeridian 1 (11L) VKS Molniya Communications In orbit Operational
24 December Flag of RussiaRSM-56 Bulava (R-30) Flag of RussiaRFS Dmitriy Donskoy, Beloye More Flag of RussiaVMF
VMF Suborbital Missile test 24 December Launch failure
Apogee: 1 kilometre (0.62 mi), first stage malfunction
25 December
20:18:12
Flag of RussiaProton-K/DM-2 Flag of RussiaBaikonur Site 81/24 Flag of RussiaVKS
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2424 (GLONASS-M) KNITs Medium Earth Navigation In orbit Operational
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2425 (GLONASS-M) KNITs Medium Earth Navigation In orbit Operational
Flag of RussiaKosmos-2426 (GLONASS-M) KNITs Medium Earth Navigation In orbit Operational
27 December
14:23:38
Flag of RussiaSoyuz-2.1b/Fregat Flag of KazakhstanBaikonur Site 31/6 Flag of EuropeFlag of RussiaStarsem
Flag of FranceCoRoT CNES Low Earth Astronomy In orbit Operational
Maiden flight of Soyuz-2.1b/Fregat
Unknown Flag of the United StatesUGM-133 Trident II (D5) Flag of the United StatesSubmarine, WTR Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
US Navy Suborbital Missile test   Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
Unknown Flag of the United StatesUGM-133 Trident II (D5) Flag of the United StatesSubmarine, WTR Flag of the United StatesUS Navy
US Navy Suborbital Missile test   Successful
Apogee: 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)

[edit] Deep Space Rendezvous in 2006

Date (GMT) Spacecraft Event Remarks
15 January Stardust Capsule landing on Earth with cometary samples
15 January Cassini 10th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 2,042 kilometres (1,269 mi)
27 February Cassini 11th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 1,812 kilometres (1,126 mi)
10 March Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Areocentric orbit injection
18 March Cassini 12th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 1,947 kilometres (1,210 mi)
11 April Venus Express Cytherean orbit injection
30 April Cassini 13th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 1,853 kilometres (1,151 mi)
20 May Cassini 14th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 1,879 kilometres (1,168 mi)
2 July Cassini 15th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 1,911 kilometres (1,187 mi)
22 July Cassini 16th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 950 kilometres (590 mi)
4 September SMART-1 Lunar impact
7 September Cassini 17th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 950 kilometres (590 mi)
23 September Cassini 18th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 950 kilometres (590 mi)
9 October Cassini 19th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 950 kilometres (590 mi)
23 October MESSENGER 1st flyby of Venus Gravity assist
25 October Cassini 20th flyby of Titan Closest approach: 950 kilometres (590 mi)
12 December Cassini 21st flyby of Titan Closest approach: 950 kilometres (590 mi)
28 December Cassini 22nd flyby of Titan Closest approach: 1,500 kilometres (930 mi)

[edit] EVAs

Start Date/Time Duration End Time Spacecraft Crew Function Remarks
3 February
09:55
5 hours
43 minutes
16:27 Expedition 12
ISS Pirs
Flag of the United StatesWilliam S. McArthur
Flag of RussiaValery Tokarev
Released SuitSat-1, retrieved the Biorisk experiment, photographed a sensor for a micrometeoroid experiment, and tied off the surviving umbilical of the Mobile Transporter.[12]
1 June
23:48
6 hours
31 minutes
2 June
06:19
Expedition 13
ISS Pirs
Flag of RussiaPavel Vinogradov
Flag of the United StatesJeffrey Williams
Repaired a vent for the Elektron unit, retrieved a Biorisk experiment, retrieved a contamination-monitoring device from Zvezda, and replaced a malfunctioning camera on the Mobile Base System.[13]
8 July
13:17
7 hours
31 minutes
20:48 STS-121
ISS Quest
Flag of the United Kingdom/Flag of the United StatesPiers Sellers
Flag of the United StatesMichael E. Fossum
Installed a blade blocker in the zenith Interface Umbilical Assembly (IUA) to protect the undamaged power, data and video cable, rerouted the cable to prepare for the second EVA. Tested the combination of the SSRMS and the Orbiter Boom Sensor System as a platform for astronauts to make repairs to a damaged orbiter.[14]
10 July
12:14
6 hours
47 minutes
19:01 STS-121
ISS Quest
Flag of the United Kingdom/Flag of the United StatesPiers Sellers
Flag of the United StatesMichael E. Fossum
Restored the Mobile Transporter to full operation, and delivered a spare pump module for the station’s cooling system.[15]
12 July
07:11
6 hours
20 minutes
13:31 STS-121
ISS Quest
Flag of the United Kingdom/Flag of the United StatesPiers Sellers
Flag of the United StatesMichael E. Fossum
Used an infrared camera to shoot 20 seconds of video of selected reinforced carbon-carbon (RCC) panels on the shuttle wing’s leading edge, and then moved to the payload bay to test a shuttle tile repair material known as NOAX on pre-damaged shuttle tiles that were flown in a test container.[16]
3 August
14:04
5 hours
54 minutes
19:58 Expedition 13
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesJeffrey Williams
Flag of GermanyThomas Reiter
Installed the Floating Potential Measurement Unit, two MISSE containers, a controller for a thermal radiator rotary joint on the S1 truss, a starboard jumper and spool positioning device on S1, a light on the truss railway handcart, and installed and replaced a malfunctioning GPS antenna. Tested an infrared camera designed to detect damage in a shuttle's thermal protection tiles. Inspection and photography of a scratch on the Quest airlock hatch.[17]
12 September
10:17
5 hours
26 minutes
15:43 STS-115
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesJoseph R. Tanner
Flag of the United StatesHeidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper
Initial installation of the P3/P4 truss. Connected power cables on the truss, released the launch restraints on the solar array blanket box, the Beta Gimbal Assembly, and the solar array wings. Configured the Solar Alpha Rotary Joint, and removed two circuit interrupt devices to prepare for STS-116.[18] Piper became the 7th American and the 8th female spacewalker.
13 September
09:05
7 hours
11 minutes
16:16 STS-115
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesDaniel C. Burbank
Flag of CanadaSteven MacLean
Continued installation of the P3/4 truss onto the station, and activated the SARJ.[19]
15 September
10:00
6 hours
42 minutes
16:42 STS-115
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesJoseph R. Tanner
Flag of the United StatesHeidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper
Installed a radiator onto the P3/4 truss, powered up a cooling radiator for the new solar arrays, replaced an S-Band radio antenna, and installed insulation for another antenna. Tanner took photos of the shuttle's wings using an infrared camera.[20]
22 November
23:17
5 hours
38 minutes
23 November
04:55
Expedition 14
ISS Pirs
Flag of RussiaMikhail Tyurin
Flag of the United StatesMichael Lopez-Alegria
"Orbiting golf shot" event sponsored by a Canadian golf company. Lopez-Alegria put the tee on the ladder outside Pirs, while Tyurin set up a camera, and then performed the golf shot. Inspected and photographed a Kurs antenna, relocated an ATV WAL antenna, installed a BTN neutron experiment, and jettisoned two thermal covers from the BTN.[21]
12 December
20:31
6 hours
36 minutes
13 December
03:07
STS-116
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesRobert Curbeam
Flag of SwedenChrister Fuglesang
Installed the P5 Truss, and replaced a video camera on the S1 truss.[22]
14 December
19:41
5 hours 15 December
00:41
STS-116
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesRobert Curbeam
Flag of SwedenChrister Fuglesang
Reconfigured channels 2–3 on the P3/P4 truss to take advantage of the new solar arrays, relocated two handcarts that run along the station’s main truss, put a thermal cover on the station’s robotic arm, and installed bags of tools for future spacewalkers.[23]
16 December
19:25
7 hours
31 minutes
17 December
02:57
STS-116
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesRobert Curbeam
Flag of the United StatesSunita Williams
Reconfigured channels 1 and 4 on the P3/P4 truss to take advantage of the new solar arrays, installed a robotic arm grapple fixture, and positioned three bundles ofdebris shield panels outside Zvezda. Additional time was spent trying to help retract the P6 solar array panel by shaking the panel's blanket box from its base.[24] Williams became the 8th American and the 9th female spacewalker.
18 December
19:00
6 hours
38 minutes
19 December
01:38
STS-116
ISS Quest
Flag of the United StatesRobert Curbeam
Flag of SwedenChrister Fuglesang
Assisted ground controllers with retracting the P6 solar array panels.[25]

[edit] Orbital launch summary

[edit] By country

Country Launches Successes Failures Partial failures Remarks
Flag of Europe Europe 5 5 0 0
 India 1 0 1 0
Flag of the United Nations International 5 5 0 0 (Sea Launch)
 Japan 6 6 0 0
 North Korea 1 0 1 0 Disputed
 People's Republic of China 6 6 0 0
 Russia 22 20 2 0
 United States 18 17 1 0

[edit] By rocket

Rocket Country Launches Successes Failures Partial failures Remarks
Ariane 5ECA Flag of Europe Europe 5 5 0 0
Atlas V  United States 2 2 0 0
Delta II  United States 6 6 0 0
Delta IV  United States 3 3 0 0
Dnepr-1  Ukraine 2 1 1 0
Falcon 1  United States 1 0 1 0 Maiden flight
GSLV  India 1 0 1 0
H-IIA  Japan 4 4 0 0
Kosmos-3M  Russia 1 1 0 0
Long March 2C  People's Republic of China 1 1 0 0
Long March 3A  People's Republic of China 2 2 0 0
Long March 3B  People's Republic of China 1 1 0 0
Long March 4B  People's Republic of China 1 1 0 0
Long March 4B-II (4C)  People's Republic of China 1 1 0 0 Maiden flight
M-V  Japan 2 2 0 0 Retired
Minotaur I  United States 2 2 0 0
Molniya-M  Russia 1 1 0 0
Pegasus-XL  United States 1 1 0 0
Proton-K  Russia 2 2 0 0
Proton-M  Russia 4 3 1 0
Rockot  Russia 1 1 0 0
Shtil'  Russia 1 1 0 0
Soyuz-2  Russia 3 3 0 0
Soyuz-FG  Russia 2 2 0 0
Soyuz-U  Russia 6 6 0 0
Space Shuttle  United States 3 3 0 0
Start-1  Russia 1 1 0 0
Tsyklon-2  Ukraine 1 1 0 0 Retired
Taepodong-2  North Korea 1 0 1 0 Maiden flight, disputed
Zenit-3SL  International 5 5 0 0

[edit] By orbit

Orbital regime Launches Successes Failures Accidentally
Achieved
Remarks
Low Earth orbit 35 32 3 0 Includes disputed North Korean launch failure
Medium Earth orbit 3 3 0 1
Geosynchronous/transfer 24 22 2 0
High Earth orbit 3 3 0 0 Including lunar transfer and Molniya orbits
Heliocentric orbit 1 1 0 0 Including planetary transfer orbits
Galactocentric orbit 1 1 0 0

[edit] References

Generic references:

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ "Press Release of the "Sounding Rocket V" Experiment". NSPO. 2006-01-18. http://www.nspo.org.tw/2008e/news/news_content.php?id=000159. Retrieved on 2009-02-20. 
  2. ^ "55 bil. yen JAXA map-making satellite sends useless data". Yomiuri Online. http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20080110TDY02309.htm. [dead link]
  3. ^ JAXA (2008-01-16). Utilization of Data Acquired by "DAICHI" (Advanced Land Observing Satellite) for Maps. Press release. http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2008/01/20080116_sac_daichi_e.html. Retrieved on 2008-04-23. 
  4. ^ JAXA. "平成17年度 ロケット打上げ及び追跡管制計画書 陸域観測技術衛星(ALOS) H-IIAロケット8号機(H-IIA・F8)" (in Japanese) (PDF). JAXA. p. 1. http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2005/11/20051130_sac_h2a-f8_3.pdf. Retrieved on 2009-02-22. 
  5. ^ "Rocket System Corporation". http://h2a.mhi.co.jp/en/RSC/mtsat2/press/rsc.pdf. Retrieved on 2008-04-23. 
  6. ^ "平成17年度 ロケット受託打上げ及び追跡管制支援計画書 運輸多目的衛星新2号(MTSAT-2) H-ⅡAロケット9号機(H-ⅡA・F9)" (in Japanese) (PDF). JAXA. http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2005/12/20051207_sac_h2a-f9.pdf. Retrieved on 2009-02-22. 
  7. ^ Oberg, James (2006-03-24). "ArabSat bites the dust, dashing hopes". MSNBC. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11999597/. Retrieved on 2009-02-20. 
  8. ^ "COMPASS" (in English). Russian Space Web. 2006-12-28. http://www.russianspaceweb.com/compass.html. Retrieved on 2008-07-18. 
  9. ^ Krebs, Gunter. "US-PM". Gunter's Space Page. http://space.skyrocket.de/index_frame.htm?http://www.skyrocket.de/space/doc_sdat/us-pm.htm. 
  10. ^ "M-V-7号機により打ち上げた副衛星(SSSAT)の実験結果について" (in Japanese). ISAS. JAXA. http://www.isas.jaxa.jp/j/snews/2006/1031_sssat.shtml. Retrieved on 2009-02-22. 
  11. ^ "Deployment Result of the Large Deployable Antenna Reflectors of the Engineering Test Satellite VIII "KIKU No. 8"". Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. 2006-12-26. http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2006/12/20061226_kiku8-2_e.html. 
  12. ^ NASA (2006). "Crew Back in Station After Spacewalk". NASA. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition12/exp12_eva2.html. Retrieved on October 21, 2008. 
  13. ^ NASA (2006). "Station Crew Winds Up Successful Spacewalk". NASA. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition13/eva1.html. Retrieved on October 21, 2008. 
  14. ^ NASA (2006). "STS-121 MCC Status Report #09". NASA. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/sts121/news/STS-121-09.html. Retrieved on October 21. 2008. 
  15. ^ NASA (2006). "STS-121 MCC Status Report #13". NASA. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/sts121/news/STS-121-13.html. Retrieved on October 21, 2008. 
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