Re: APOD: New Horizons (2015 Jun 22)
Posted: Mon Jun 22, 2015 6:30 pm
A listing of solar system exploration missions. 1946 to 2015 (From WIKI)
1940s
The first photo taken from space
1946
United States V-2 rocket – 24 October 1946 – First photograph of Earth from space
1950s
Sputnik 1 – First Earth orbiter
1957
Soviet Union Sputnik 1 – 4 October 1957 – First Earth orbiter
Soviet Union Sputnik 2 – 3 November 1957 – Earth orbiter, first animal in orbit, a dog named Laika
1958
United States Explorer 1 – 1 February 1958 – Earth orbiter; first American orbiter, discovered Van Allen radiation belts
United States Vanguard 1 – 17 March 1958 – Earth orbiter; oldest spacecraft still in Earth orbit
1959
Soviet Union Luna 1 – 2 January 1959 – First lunar flyby (attempted lunar impact?)
United States Pioneer 4 – 3 March 1959 – Lunar flyby
Soviet Union Luna 2 – 12 September 1959 – First lunar impact
Soviet Union Luna 3 – 4 October 1959 – Lunar flyby; First images of far side of Moon
1960s
Vostok 1 – First manned Earth orbiter
Mariner 2 – First Venus flyby
Mariner 4 – First Mars flyby
Luna 9 – First lunar lander
Venera 4 – First Venus atmospheric probe
Zond 5 – First lunar flyby and return to Earth
Apollo 8 - First manned lunar orbiter
Apollo 11 – First manned lunar landing
1960
United States Pioneer 5 – 11 March 1960 – Interplanetary space investigations
1961
Soviet Union Venera 1 – 12 February 1961 – Venus flyby (contact lost before flyby)
Soviet Union Vostok 1 – 12 April 1961 – First manned Earth orbiter
United States Mercury-Redstone 3 – 5 May 1961 – First American in space
United States Ranger 1 – 23 August 1961 – Attempted lunar test flight
United States Ranger 2 – 18 November 1961 – Attempted lunar test flight
1962
United States Ranger 3 – 26 January 1962 – Attempted lunar impact (missed Moon)
United States Mercury-Atlas 6 – 20 February 1962 – First American manned Earth orbiter
United States Ranger 4 – 23 April 1962 – Lunar impact (but unintentionally hit lunar far-side and returned no data)
United States Mariner 2 – 27 August 1962 – First successful planetary encounter, First successful Venus flyby
United States Ranger 5 – 18 October 1962 – Attempted lunar impact (missed Moon)
Soviet Union Mars 1 – 1 November 1962 – Mars flyby (contact lost)
1963
Soviet Union Luna 4 – 2 April 1963 – Attempted lunar lander (missed Moon)
Soviet Union Cosmos 21 – 11 November 1963 – Attempted Venera test flight?
1964
United States Ranger 6 – 30 January 1964 – Lunar impact (cameras failed)
Soviet Union Zond 1 – 2 April 1964 – Venus flyby (contact lost)
United States Ranger 7 – 28 July 1964 – Lunar impact
United States Mariner 3 – 5 November 1964 – Attempted Mars flyby (failed to attain correct trajectory)
United States Mariner 4 – 28 November 1964 – First Mars flyby
Soviet Union Zond 2 – 30 November 1964 – Mars flyby (contact lost)
1965
United States Ranger 8 – 17 February 1965 – Lunar impact
United States Ranger 9 – 21 March 1965 – Lunar impact
Soviet Union Luna 5 – 9 May 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing)
Soviet Union Luna 6 – 8 June 1965 – Attempted lunar lander (missed Moon)
Soviet Union Zond 3 – 18 July 1965 – Lunar flyby
Soviet Union Luna 7 – 4 October 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing)
Soviet Union Venera 2 – 12 November 1965 – Venus flyby (contact lost)
Soviet Union Venera 3 – 16 November 1965 – Venus lander (contact lost) – First spacecraft to reach another planet's surface, First Venus impact
Soviet Union Luna 8 – 3 December 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing?)
United States Pioneer 6 – 16 December 1965 – "Space weather" observations
1966 AS-201
Soviet Union Luna 9 – 31 January 1966 – First lunar lander
United States AS-201 – 26 February 1966 – Lunar program test flight
Soviet Union Luna 10 – 31 March 1966 – First lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 1 – 30 May 1966 – Lunar lander
United States Explorer 33 – 1 July 1966 – Attempted lunar orbiter (failed to attain lunar orbit)
United States Lunar Orbiter 1 – 10 August 1966 – Lunar orbiter
United States Pioneer 7 – 17 August 1966 – "Space weather" observations
Soviet Union Luna 11 – 24 August 1966 – Lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 2 – 20 September 1966 – Attempted lunar lander (crashed into Moon)
Soviet Union Luna 12 – 22 October 1966 – Lunar orbiter
United States Lunar Orbiter 2 – 6 November 1966 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Luna 13 – 21 December 1966 – Lunar lander
1967
United States Lunar Orbiter 3 – 4 February 1967 – Lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 3 – 17 April 1967 – Lunar lander
United States Lunar Orbiter 4 – 8 May 1967 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Venera 4 – 12 June 1967 – First Venus atmospheric probe
United States Mariner 5 – 14 June 1967 – Venus flyby
United States Surveyor 4 – 14 July 1967 – Attempted lunar lander (crashed into Moon)
United States Explorer 35 (IMP-E) – 19 July 1967 – Lunar orbiter
United States Lunar Orbiter 5 – 1 August 1967 – Lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 5 – 8 September 1967 – Lunar lander
United States Surveyor 6 – 7 November 1967 – Lunar lander
United States Apollo 4 – 9 November 1967 – Lunar program test flight
United States Pioneer 8 – 13 December 1967 – "Space weather" observations
1968
United States Surveyor 7 – 7 January 1968 – Lunar lander
United States Apollo 5 – 22 January 1968 – Lunar program test flight
Soviet Union Zond 4 – 2 March 1968 – Lunar program test flight
Soviet Union Luna 14 – 7 April 1968 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Zond 5 – 15 September 1968 – First lunar flyby and return to Earth
United States Apollo 7 – 22 October 1968 – Lunar program test flight (manned)
United States Pioneer 9 – 8 November 1968 – "Space weather" observations
Soviet Union Zond 6 – 10 November 1968 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
United States Apollo 8 – 21 December 1968 – First manned lunar orbiter
1969
Soviet Union Venera 5 – 5 January 1969 – Venus atmospheric probe
Soviet Union Venera 6 – 10 January 1969 – Venus atmospheric probe
United States Mariner 6 – 25 February 1969 – Mars flyby
United States Apollo 9 – 3 March 1969 – Manned lunar lander (LEM) flight test
United States Mariner 7 – 27 March 1969 – Mars flyby
United States Apollo 10 – 18 May 1969 – Manned lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Luna E-8-5 No.402 – 14 June 1969 – Attempted lunar sample return, first attempted sample return mission
Soviet Union Luna 15 – 13 July 1969 – Second attempted lunar sample return
United States Apollo 11 – 16 July 1969 – First manned lunar landing and first successful sample return mission
Soviet Union Zond 7 – 7 August 1969 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
United States Apollo 12 – 14 November 1969 – Manned lunar landing
1970s
Venera 7 – First Venus lander
Mars 3 – First Mars lander
Pioneer 10 – First Jupiter flyby
Mariner 10 – First Mercury flyby
Voyager 2 – First Uranus/first Neptune flyby
1970
United States Apollo 13 – 11 April 1970 – Manned lunar flyby and return to Earth (manned lunar landing aborted) Farthest from Earth a human has gone
Soviet Union Venera 7 – 17 August 1970 – First Venus lander
Soviet Union Luna 16 – 12 September 1970 – First robotic lunar sample return
Soviet Union Zond 8 – 20 October 1970 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
Soviet Union Luna 17/Lunokhod 1 – 10 November 1970 – First lunar rover
1971
United States Apollo 14 – 31 January 1971 – Manned lunar landing
Soviet Union Salyut 1 – 19 April 1971 – First space station
United States Mariner 9 – 30 May 1971 – First Mars orbiter
Soviet Union Mars 2 – 19 May 1971 – Mars orbiter and attempted lander; First Mars impact
Soviet Union Mars 3 – 28 May 1971 – Mars orbiter, First Mars lander (lost contact after 14.5s) and First Mars atmospheric probe
United States Apollo 15 – 26 July 1971 – Manned lunar landing; First manned lunar rover
Soviet Union Luna 18 – 2 September 1971 – Attempted lunar sample return (crashed into Moon)
Soviet Union Luna 19 – 28 September 1971 – Lunar orbiter
1972
Soviet Union Luna 20 – 14 February 1972 – Lunar robotic sample return
United States Pioneer 10 – 3 March 1972 – First Jupiter flyby
Soviet Union Venera 8 – 27 March 1972 – Venus lander
United States Apollo 16 – 16 April 1972 – Manned lunar landing
United States Apollo 17 – 7 December 1972 – Last manned lunar landing
1973
Soviet Union Luna 21/Lunokhod 2 – 8 January 1973 – Lunar rover
United States Pioneer 11 – 5 April 1973 – Jupiter flyby and First Saturn flyby
United States Skylab – 14 May 1973 – First American space station
United States Explorer 49 (RAE-B) – 10 June 1973 – Lunar orbiter/radio astronomy
Soviet Union Mars 4 – 21 July 1973 – Mars flyby (attempted Mars orbiter)
Soviet Union Mars 5 – 25 July 1973 – Mars orbiter
Soviet Union Mars 6 – 5 August 1973 – Mars orbiter and attempted lander (failed due to damage on Mars landing)
Soviet Union Mars 7 – 9 August 1973 – Mars flyby and attempted lander (missed Mars)
United States Mariner 10 – 4 November 1973 – Venus flyby and First Mercury flyby
1974
Soviet Union Luna 22 – 2 June 1974 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Luna 23 – 28 October 1974 – Attempted lunar sample return (failed due to damage on lunar landing)
United States West Germany Helios-A – 10 December 1974 – Solar observations
1975
Soviet Union Venera 9 – 8 June 1975 – First Venus orbiter and lander; First images from surface of Venus
Soviet Union Venera 10 – 14 June 1975 – Venus orbiter and lander
United States Viking 1 – 20 August 1975 – Mars orbiter and lander; First lander returning data and First pictures from Martian surface
United States Viking 2 – 9 September 1975 – Mars orbiter and lander
1976
United States West Germany Helios-B – 15 January 1976 – Solar observations, Closest solar approach (0.29 AU)
Soviet Union Luna 24 – 9 August 1976 – Lunar robotic sample return
1977
United States Voyager 2 – 20 August 1977 – Jupiter/Saturn/first Uranus/first Neptune flyby
United States Voyager 1 – 5 September 1977 – Jupiter/Saturn flyby, Farthest human-made object – currently (2014) about 130 AU
1978
United States Pioneer Venus 1 – 20 May 1978 – Venus orbiter
United States Pioneer Venus 2 – 8 August 1978 – Venus atmospheric probes
United States European Union ISEE-3 – 12 August 1978 – Solar wind investigations; later redesignated International Cometary Explorer and performed Comet Giacobini-Zinner and Comet Halley flybys – First comet flyby
Soviet Union Venera 11 – 9 September 1978 – Venus flyby and lander
Soviet Union Venera 12 – 14 September 1978 – Venus flyby and lander
1980s
Giotto – Comet Halley flyby
1981
Soviet Union Venera 13 – 30 October 1981 – Venus flyby and lander
Soviet Union Venera 14 – 4 November 1981 – Venus flyby and lander
1983
Soviet Union Venera 15 – 2 June 1983 – Venus orbiter
Soviet Union Venera 16 – 7 June 1983 – Venus orbiter
1984
Soviet Union Vega 1 – 15 December 1984 – Venus flyby, lander and first balloon; continued on to Comet Halley flyby
Soviet Union Vega 2 – 21 December 1984 – Venus flyby, lander and balloon; continued on to Comet Halley flyby
1985
Galileo – Mission to JupiterJapan Sakigake – 7 January 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
European Union Giotto – 2 July 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
Japan Suisei (Planet-A) – 18 August 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
1986
Soviet Union Mir – 20 February 1986 – First modular space station (completion 1996)
1988
Soviet Union Phobos 1 – 7 July 1988 – Attempted Mars orbiter/Phobos landers (contact lost)
Soviet Union Phobos 2 – 12 July 1988 – Mars orbiter/attempted Phobos landers (contact lost)
1989
United States Magellan – 4 May 1989 – Venus orbiter
United States Galileo – 18 October 1989 – Venus flyby, first Asteroid flyby, first Asteroid moon discovery, first Jupiter orbiter/atmospheric probe
1990s
1990
Mars Pathfinder – Mars lander and first Mars roverJapan Hiten (Muses-A) – 24 January 1990 – Lunar flyby and orbiter
United States European Union Hubble Space Telescope – Orbital space telescope
United States European Union Ulysses – 6 October 1990 – Solar polar orbiter
1991
Japan United States United Kingdom Yohkoh (Solar-A) – 30 August 1991 – Solar observations
1992
United States Mars Observer – 25 September 1992 – Attempted Mars orbiter (contact lost)
1994
United States Clementine – 25 January 1994 – Lunar orbiter/attempted asteroid flyby
United States WIND – 1 November 1994 – Solar wind observations
1995
European Union United States SOHO – 2 December 1995 – Solar observatory
1996
United States NEAR Shoemaker – 17 February 1996 – Eros orbiter, first near-Earth asteroid flyby, first asteroid orbit and first asteroid landing
United States Mars Global Surveyor – 7 November 1996 – Mars orbiter
Russia Mars 96 – 16 November 1996 – Attempted Mars orbiter/landers (failed to escape Earth orbit)
United States Mars Pathfinder – 4 December 1996 – Mars lander and first planetary rover
1997
Cassini–Huygens – First Saturn orbiter and first Titan landerUnited States ACE – 25 August 1997 – Solar wind and "space weather" observations
United States European Union Italy Cassini–Huygens – 15 October 1997 – First Saturn orbiter and first outer planet lander
China AsiaSat 3/HGS-1 – 24 December 1997 – Lunar flyby
1998
United States Lunar Prospector – 7 January 1998 – Lunar orbiter
Japan Nozomi (probe) (also known as Planet-B) – 3 July 1998 – Attempted Mars orbiter (failed to enter Mars orbit)
United States Deep Space 1 (DS1) – 24 October 1998 – Asteroid and comet flyby
United States Russia European Union Japan Canada – 20 November 1998 – International Space Station (planned completion 2013)
United States Mars Climate Orbiter – 11 December 1998 – Attempted Mars orbiter (orbit insertion failed)
1999
United States Mars Polar Lander/Deep Space 2 (DS2) – 3 January 1999 – Attempted Mars lander/penetrators (contact lost)
United States Stardust – 7 February 1999 – First comet coma sample return – returned 15 January 2006
2000s
Mars Express/Beagle 2 – First planetary mission by the ESA
MESSENGER – First Mercury orbiter
2001
United States 2001 Mars Odyssey – 7 April 2001 – Mars orbiter
United States Genesis – 8 August 2001 – First solar wind sample return
2002
United States CONTOUR – 3 July 2002 – Attempted flyby of three comet nuclei (lost in space)
2003
Japan Hayabusa (Muses-C) – 9 May 2003 – Asteroid lander and First sample return from asteroid
United States Mars Exploration Rovers – 10 June/7 July 2003 – Two Mars rovers ("Spirit" and "Opportunity")
European Union United Kingdom Mars Express/Beagle 2 – 1 June 2003 – Mars orbiter/lander (lander failure)
European Union SMART-1 – 27 September 2003 – Lunar orbiter
China Shenzhou 5 – 15 October 2003 – China's first manned Earth orbiter
2004
European Union Rosetta/Philae – 2 March 2004 – First comet orbiter and lander (Landed on November 2014)
United States MESSENGER – 3 August 2004 – First Mercury orbiter (Achieved orbit 18 March 2011)
2005
United States Deep Impact – 12 January 2005 – First comet impact
United States Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter – 12 August 2005 – Mars orbiter
European Union Venus Express – 9 November 2005 – Venus polar orbiter
2006
United States New Horizons – 19 January 2006 – First Pluto/Charon and Kuiper Belt flyby (Expected arrival 14 July 2015)
Japan United States United Kingdom Hinode (Solar-B) – 22 September 2006 – Solar orbiter
United States STEREO – 26 October 2006 – Two spacecraft, solar orbiters
2007
United States Phoenix – 4 August 2007 – Mars polar lander
Japan SELENE (Kaguya) – 14 September 2007 – Lunar orbiters
United States Dawn – 27 September 2007 – Asteroid Ceres and Vesta orbiter (Entered orbit around Vesta on 16 July 2011 and around Ceres on 6 March 2015)
China Chang'e 1 – 24 October 2007 – Lunar orbiter
2008
India Chandrayaan-1 – 22 October 2008 – Lunar orbiter and impactor – Discovered water on the moon
2009
United States Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter/LCROSS – 18 June 2009 – Lunar polar orbiter and lunar impactor
2010s
Mars Science Laboratory – Mars lander and large rover
Mangalyaan – First Indian Mars orbiter
2010
United States Solar Dynamics Observatory – 11 February 2010 – Continuous solar monitoring
Japan Akatsuki (Planet-C) – 20 May 2010 – Venus orbiter (orbit insertion failed in 2010 / postponed to December 2015)
France PICARD – 15 June 2010 – Solar monitoring
China Chang'e 2 – 1 October 2010 – Lunar orbiter, Asteroid 4179 Toutatis flyby
2011
United States Juno – 5 August 2011 – Jupiter orbiter
United States GRAIL – 10 September 2011 – Two spacecraft, Lunar orbiters
China Tiangong (Project 921-2) - 29 September 2011 - First Chinese space station[1] (planned completion around 2020)
Russia China Fobos-Grunt and Yinghuo-1 – 8 November 2011 – Phobos orbiter, lander and sample return (Russia), Mars orbiter (China) – failed to escape Earth orbit
United States Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity Rover) – 26 November 2011 – large Mars 900 kg Rover (landed 6 August 2012)
2012
United States Van Allen Probes (RBSP) - 30 August 2012 - Earth Van Allen radiation belts study
2013
United States IRIS – 27 June 2013 – Solar observations
United States LADEE – 6 September 2013 – Lunar orbiter
Japan Hisaki - 14 September 2013 - Planetary atmosphere observatory
India Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan) – 5 November 2013 – Mars orbiter
United States MAVEN – 18 November 2013 – Mars orbiter
China Chang'e 3 – 1 December 2013 - First Chinese lunar lander and rover (most recent lander since Russian Luna 24 in 1976)
2014
China Chang'e 5-T1 – 23 October 2014 - Lunar flyby/orbiter and Earth reentry probe; technology demonstration to prepare for Chang'e 5 mission
Japan Hayabusa 2 – 3 December 2014 – Asteroid lander and sample return
Japan PROCYON – 3 December 2014 – Asteroid flyby - flyby cancelled due to engine failure
United States Exploration Flight Test 1 – 5 December 2014 – Unmanned Earth orbital test of Orion interplanetary vehicle.
2015
United States DSCOVR – 11 February 2015 – Solar observation
United States Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission – 13 March 2015 – Magnetospheric research
1940s
The first photo taken from space
1946
United States V-2 rocket – 24 October 1946 – First photograph of Earth from space
1950s
Sputnik 1 – First Earth orbiter
1957
Soviet Union Sputnik 1 – 4 October 1957 – First Earth orbiter
Soviet Union Sputnik 2 – 3 November 1957 – Earth orbiter, first animal in orbit, a dog named Laika
1958
United States Explorer 1 – 1 February 1958 – Earth orbiter; first American orbiter, discovered Van Allen radiation belts
United States Vanguard 1 – 17 March 1958 – Earth orbiter; oldest spacecraft still in Earth orbit
1959
Soviet Union Luna 1 – 2 January 1959 – First lunar flyby (attempted lunar impact?)
United States Pioneer 4 – 3 March 1959 – Lunar flyby
Soviet Union Luna 2 – 12 September 1959 – First lunar impact
Soviet Union Luna 3 – 4 October 1959 – Lunar flyby; First images of far side of Moon
1960s
Vostok 1 – First manned Earth orbiter
Mariner 2 – First Venus flyby
Mariner 4 – First Mars flyby
Luna 9 – First lunar lander
Venera 4 – First Venus atmospheric probe
Zond 5 – First lunar flyby and return to Earth
Apollo 8 - First manned lunar orbiter
Apollo 11 – First manned lunar landing
1960
United States Pioneer 5 – 11 March 1960 – Interplanetary space investigations
1961
Soviet Union Venera 1 – 12 February 1961 – Venus flyby (contact lost before flyby)
Soviet Union Vostok 1 – 12 April 1961 – First manned Earth orbiter
United States Mercury-Redstone 3 – 5 May 1961 – First American in space
United States Ranger 1 – 23 August 1961 – Attempted lunar test flight
United States Ranger 2 – 18 November 1961 – Attempted lunar test flight
1962
United States Ranger 3 – 26 January 1962 – Attempted lunar impact (missed Moon)
United States Mercury-Atlas 6 – 20 February 1962 – First American manned Earth orbiter
United States Ranger 4 – 23 April 1962 – Lunar impact (but unintentionally hit lunar far-side and returned no data)
United States Mariner 2 – 27 August 1962 – First successful planetary encounter, First successful Venus flyby
United States Ranger 5 – 18 October 1962 – Attempted lunar impact (missed Moon)
Soviet Union Mars 1 – 1 November 1962 – Mars flyby (contact lost)
1963
Soviet Union Luna 4 – 2 April 1963 – Attempted lunar lander (missed Moon)
Soviet Union Cosmos 21 – 11 November 1963 – Attempted Venera test flight?
1964
United States Ranger 6 – 30 January 1964 – Lunar impact (cameras failed)
Soviet Union Zond 1 – 2 April 1964 – Venus flyby (contact lost)
United States Ranger 7 – 28 July 1964 – Lunar impact
United States Mariner 3 – 5 November 1964 – Attempted Mars flyby (failed to attain correct trajectory)
United States Mariner 4 – 28 November 1964 – First Mars flyby
Soviet Union Zond 2 – 30 November 1964 – Mars flyby (contact lost)
1965
United States Ranger 8 – 17 February 1965 – Lunar impact
United States Ranger 9 – 21 March 1965 – Lunar impact
Soviet Union Luna 5 – 9 May 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing)
Soviet Union Luna 6 – 8 June 1965 – Attempted lunar lander (missed Moon)
Soviet Union Zond 3 – 18 July 1965 – Lunar flyby
Soviet Union Luna 7 – 4 October 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing)
Soviet Union Venera 2 – 12 November 1965 – Venus flyby (contact lost)
Soviet Union Venera 3 – 16 November 1965 – Venus lander (contact lost) – First spacecraft to reach another planet's surface, First Venus impact
Soviet Union Luna 8 – 3 December 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing?)
United States Pioneer 6 – 16 December 1965 – "Space weather" observations
1966 AS-201
Soviet Union Luna 9 – 31 January 1966 – First lunar lander
United States AS-201 – 26 February 1966 – Lunar program test flight
Soviet Union Luna 10 – 31 March 1966 – First lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 1 – 30 May 1966 – Lunar lander
United States Explorer 33 – 1 July 1966 – Attempted lunar orbiter (failed to attain lunar orbit)
United States Lunar Orbiter 1 – 10 August 1966 – Lunar orbiter
United States Pioneer 7 – 17 August 1966 – "Space weather" observations
Soviet Union Luna 11 – 24 August 1966 – Lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 2 – 20 September 1966 – Attempted lunar lander (crashed into Moon)
Soviet Union Luna 12 – 22 October 1966 – Lunar orbiter
United States Lunar Orbiter 2 – 6 November 1966 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Luna 13 – 21 December 1966 – Lunar lander
1967
United States Lunar Orbiter 3 – 4 February 1967 – Lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 3 – 17 April 1967 – Lunar lander
United States Lunar Orbiter 4 – 8 May 1967 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Venera 4 – 12 June 1967 – First Venus atmospheric probe
United States Mariner 5 – 14 June 1967 – Venus flyby
United States Surveyor 4 – 14 July 1967 – Attempted lunar lander (crashed into Moon)
United States Explorer 35 (IMP-E) – 19 July 1967 – Lunar orbiter
United States Lunar Orbiter 5 – 1 August 1967 – Lunar orbiter
United States Surveyor 5 – 8 September 1967 – Lunar lander
United States Surveyor 6 – 7 November 1967 – Lunar lander
United States Apollo 4 – 9 November 1967 – Lunar program test flight
United States Pioneer 8 – 13 December 1967 – "Space weather" observations
1968
United States Surveyor 7 – 7 January 1968 – Lunar lander
United States Apollo 5 – 22 January 1968 – Lunar program test flight
Soviet Union Zond 4 – 2 March 1968 – Lunar program test flight
Soviet Union Luna 14 – 7 April 1968 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Zond 5 – 15 September 1968 – First lunar flyby and return to Earth
United States Apollo 7 – 22 October 1968 – Lunar program test flight (manned)
United States Pioneer 9 – 8 November 1968 – "Space weather" observations
Soviet Union Zond 6 – 10 November 1968 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
United States Apollo 8 – 21 December 1968 – First manned lunar orbiter
1969
Soviet Union Venera 5 – 5 January 1969 – Venus atmospheric probe
Soviet Union Venera 6 – 10 January 1969 – Venus atmospheric probe
United States Mariner 6 – 25 February 1969 – Mars flyby
United States Apollo 9 – 3 March 1969 – Manned lunar lander (LEM) flight test
United States Mariner 7 – 27 March 1969 – Mars flyby
United States Apollo 10 – 18 May 1969 – Manned lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Luna E-8-5 No.402 – 14 June 1969 – Attempted lunar sample return, first attempted sample return mission
Soviet Union Luna 15 – 13 July 1969 – Second attempted lunar sample return
United States Apollo 11 – 16 July 1969 – First manned lunar landing and first successful sample return mission
Soviet Union Zond 7 – 7 August 1969 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
United States Apollo 12 – 14 November 1969 – Manned lunar landing
1970s
Venera 7 – First Venus lander
Mars 3 – First Mars lander
Pioneer 10 – First Jupiter flyby
Mariner 10 – First Mercury flyby
Voyager 2 – First Uranus/first Neptune flyby
1970
United States Apollo 13 – 11 April 1970 – Manned lunar flyby and return to Earth (manned lunar landing aborted) Farthest from Earth a human has gone
Soviet Union Venera 7 – 17 August 1970 – First Venus lander
Soviet Union Luna 16 – 12 September 1970 – First robotic lunar sample return
Soviet Union Zond 8 – 20 October 1970 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
Soviet Union Luna 17/Lunokhod 1 – 10 November 1970 – First lunar rover
1971
United States Apollo 14 – 31 January 1971 – Manned lunar landing
Soviet Union Salyut 1 – 19 April 1971 – First space station
United States Mariner 9 – 30 May 1971 – First Mars orbiter
Soviet Union Mars 2 – 19 May 1971 – Mars orbiter and attempted lander; First Mars impact
Soviet Union Mars 3 – 28 May 1971 – Mars orbiter, First Mars lander (lost contact after 14.5s) and First Mars atmospheric probe
United States Apollo 15 – 26 July 1971 – Manned lunar landing; First manned lunar rover
Soviet Union Luna 18 – 2 September 1971 – Attempted lunar sample return (crashed into Moon)
Soviet Union Luna 19 – 28 September 1971 – Lunar orbiter
1972
Soviet Union Luna 20 – 14 February 1972 – Lunar robotic sample return
United States Pioneer 10 – 3 March 1972 – First Jupiter flyby
Soviet Union Venera 8 – 27 March 1972 – Venus lander
United States Apollo 16 – 16 April 1972 – Manned lunar landing
United States Apollo 17 – 7 December 1972 – Last manned lunar landing
1973
Soviet Union Luna 21/Lunokhod 2 – 8 January 1973 – Lunar rover
United States Pioneer 11 – 5 April 1973 – Jupiter flyby and First Saturn flyby
United States Skylab – 14 May 1973 – First American space station
United States Explorer 49 (RAE-B) – 10 June 1973 – Lunar orbiter/radio astronomy
Soviet Union Mars 4 – 21 July 1973 – Mars flyby (attempted Mars orbiter)
Soviet Union Mars 5 – 25 July 1973 – Mars orbiter
Soviet Union Mars 6 – 5 August 1973 – Mars orbiter and attempted lander (failed due to damage on Mars landing)
Soviet Union Mars 7 – 9 August 1973 – Mars flyby and attempted lander (missed Mars)
United States Mariner 10 – 4 November 1973 – Venus flyby and First Mercury flyby
1974
Soviet Union Luna 22 – 2 June 1974 – Lunar orbiter
Soviet Union Luna 23 – 28 October 1974 – Attempted lunar sample return (failed due to damage on lunar landing)
United States West Germany Helios-A – 10 December 1974 – Solar observations
1975
Soviet Union Venera 9 – 8 June 1975 – First Venus orbiter and lander; First images from surface of Venus
Soviet Union Venera 10 – 14 June 1975 – Venus orbiter and lander
United States Viking 1 – 20 August 1975 – Mars orbiter and lander; First lander returning data and First pictures from Martian surface
United States Viking 2 – 9 September 1975 – Mars orbiter and lander
1976
United States West Germany Helios-B – 15 January 1976 – Solar observations, Closest solar approach (0.29 AU)
Soviet Union Luna 24 – 9 August 1976 – Lunar robotic sample return
1977
United States Voyager 2 – 20 August 1977 – Jupiter/Saturn/first Uranus/first Neptune flyby
United States Voyager 1 – 5 September 1977 – Jupiter/Saturn flyby, Farthest human-made object – currently (2014) about 130 AU
1978
United States Pioneer Venus 1 – 20 May 1978 – Venus orbiter
United States Pioneer Venus 2 – 8 August 1978 – Venus atmospheric probes
United States European Union ISEE-3 – 12 August 1978 – Solar wind investigations; later redesignated International Cometary Explorer and performed Comet Giacobini-Zinner and Comet Halley flybys – First comet flyby
Soviet Union Venera 11 – 9 September 1978 – Venus flyby and lander
Soviet Union Venera 12 – 14 September 1978 – Venus flyby and lander
1980s
Giotto – Comet Halley flyby
1981
Soviet Union Venera 13 – 30 October 1981 – Venus flyby and lander
Soviet Union Venera 14 – 4 November 1981 – Venus flyby and lander
1983
Soviet Union Venera 15 – 2 June 1983 – Venus orbiter
Soviet Union Venera 16 – 7 June 1983 – Venus orbiter
1984
Soviet Union Vega 1 – 15 December 1984 – Venus flyby, lander and first balloon; continued on to Comet Halley flyby
Soviet Union Vega 2 – 21 December 1984 – Venus flyby, lander and balloon; continued on to Comet Halley flyby
1985
Galileo – Mission to JupiterJapan Sakigake – 7 January 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
European Union Giotto – 2 July 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
Japan Suisei (Planet-A) – 18 August 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
1986
Soviet Union Mir – 20 February 1986 – First modular space station (completion 1996)
1988
Soviet Union Phobos 1 – 7 July 1988 – Attempted Mars orbiter/Phobos landers (contact lost)
Soviet Union Phobos 2 – 12 July 1988 – Mars orbiter/attempted Phobos landers (contact lost)
1989
United States Magellan – 4 May 1989 – Venus orbiter
United States Galileo – 18 October 1989 – Venus flyby, first Asteroid flyby, first Asteroid moon discovery, first Jupiter orbiter/atmospheric probe
1990s
1990
Mars Pathfinder – Mars lander and first Mars roverJapan Hiten (Muses-A) – 24 January 1990 – Lunar flyby and orbiter
United States European Union Hubble Space Telescope – Orbital space telescope
United States European Union Ulysses – 6 October 1990 – Solar polar orbiter
1991
Japan United States United Kingdom Yohkoh (Solar-A) – 30 August 1991 – Solar observations
1992
United States Mars Observer – 25 September 1992 – Attempted Mars orbiter (contact lost)
1994
United States Clementine – 25 January 1994 – Lunar orbiter/attempted asteroid flyby
United States WIND – 1 November 1994 – Solar wind observations
1995
European Union United States SOHO – 2 December 1995 – Solar observatory
1996
United States NEAR Shoemaker – 17 February 1996 – Eros orbiter, first near-Earth asteroid flyby, first asteroid orbit and first asteroid landing
United States Mars Global Surveyor – 7 November 1996 – Mars orbiter
Russia Mars 96 – 16 November 1996 – Attempted Mars orbiter/landers (failed to escape Earth orbit)
United States Mars Pathfinder – 4 December 1996 – Mars lander and first planetary rover
1997
Cassini–Huygens – First Saturn orbiter and first Titan landerUnited States ACE – 25 August 1997 – Solar wind and "space weather" observations
United States European Union Italy Cassini–Huygens – 15 October 1997 – First Saturn orbiter and first outer planet lander
China AsiaSat 3/HGS-1 – 24 December 1997 – Lunar flyby
1998
United States Lunar Prospector – 7 January 1998 – Lunar orbiter
Japan Nozomi (probe) (also known as Planet-B) – 3 July 1998 – Attempted Mars orbiter (failed to enter Mars orbit)
United States Deep Space 1 (DS1) – 24 October 1998 – Asteroid and comet flyby
United States Russia European Union Japan Canada – 20 November 1998 – International Space Station (planned completion 2013)
United States Mars Climate Orbiter – 11 December 1998 – Attempted Mars orbiter (orbit insertion failed)
1999
United States Mars Polar Lander/Deep Space 2 (DS2) – 3 January 1999 – Attempted Mars lander/penetrators (contact lost)
United States Stardust – 7 February 1999 – First comet coma sample return – returned 15 January 2006
2000s
Mars Express/Beagle 2 – First planetary mission by the ESA
MESSENGER – First Mercury orbiter
2001
United States 2001 Mars Odyssey – 7 April 2001 – Mars orbiter
United States Genesis – 8 August 2001 – First solar wind sample return
2002
United States CONTOUR – 3 July 2002 – Attempted flyby of three comet nuclei (lost in space)
2003
Japan Hayabusa (Muses-C) – 9 May 2003 – Asteroid lander and First sample return from asteroid
United States Mars Exploration Rovers – 10 June/7 July 2003 – Two Mars rovers ("Spirit" and "Opportunity")
European Union United Kingdom Mars Express/Beagle 2 – 1 June 2003 – Mars orbiter/lander (lander failure)
European Union SMART-1 – 27 September 2003 – Lunar orbiter
China Shenzhou 5 – 15 October 2003 – China's first manned Earth orbiter
2004
European Union Rosetta/Philae – 2 March 2004 – First comet orbiter and lander (Landed on November 2014)
United States MESSENGER – 3 August 2004 – First Mercury orbiter (Achieved orbit 18 March 2011)
2005
United States Deep Impact – 12 January 2005 – First comet impact
United States Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter – 12 August 2005 – Mars orbiter
European Union Venus Express – 9 November 2005 – Venus polar orbiter
2006
United States New Horizons – 19 January 2006 – First Pluto/Charon and Kuiper Belt flyby (Expected arrival 14 July 2015)
Japan United States United Kingdom Hinode (Solar-B) – 22 September 2006 – Solar orbiter
United States STEREO – 26 October 2006 – Two spacecraft, solar orbiters
2007
United States Phoenix – 4 August 2007 – Mars polar lander
Japan SELENE (Kaguya) – 14 September 2007 – Lunar orbiters
United States Dawn – 27 September 2007 – Asteroid Ceres and Vesta orbiter (Entered orbit around Vesta on 16 July 2011 and around Ceres on 6 March 2015)
China Chang'e 1 – 24 October 2007 – Lunar orbiter
2008
India Chandrayaan-1 – 22 October 2008 – Lunar orbiter and impactor – Discovered water on the moon
2009
United States Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter/LCROSS – 18 June 2009 – Lunar polar orbiter and lunar impactor
2010s
Mars Science Laboratory – Mars lander and large rover
Mangalyaan – First Indian Mars orbiter
2010
United States Solar Dynamics Observatory – 11 February 2010 – Continuous solar monitoring
Japan Akatsuki (Planet-C) – 20 May 2010 – Venus orbiter (orbit insertion failed in 2010 / postponed to December 2015)
France PICARD – 15 June 2010 – Solar monitoring
China Chang'e 2 – 1 October 2010 – Lunar orbiter, Asteroid 4179 Toutatis flyby
2011
United States Juno – 5 August 2011 – Jupiter orbiter
United States GRAIL – 10 September 2011 – Two spacecraft, Lunar orbiters
China Tiangong (Project 921-2) - 29 September 2011 - First Chinese space station[1] (planned completion around 2020)
Russia China Fobos-Grunt and Yinghuo-1 – 8 November 2011 – Phobos orbiter, lander and sample return (Russia), Mars orbiter (China) – failed to escape Earth orbit
United States Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity Rover) – 26 November 2011 – large Mars 900 kg Rover (landed 6 August 2012)
2012
United States Van Allen Probes (RBSP) - 30 August 2012 - Earth Van Allen radiation belts study
2013
United States IRIS – 27 June 2013 – Solar observations
United States LADEE – 6 September 2013 – Lunar orbiter
Japan Hisaki - 14 September 2013 - Planetary atmosphere observatory
India Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan) – 5 November 2013 – Mars orbiter
United States MAVEN – 18 November 2013 – Mars orbiter
China Chang'e 3 – 1 December 2013 - First Chinese lunar lander and rover (most recent lander since Russian Luna 24 in 1976)
2014
China Chang'e 5-T1 – 23 October 2014 - Lunar flyby/orbiter and Earth reentry probe; technology demonstration to prepare for Chang'e 5 mission
Japan Hayabusa 2 – 3 December 2014 – Asteroid lander and sample return
Japan PROCYON – 3 December 2014 – Asteroid flyby - flyby cancelled due to engine failure
United States Exploration Flight Test 1 – 5 December 2014 – Unmanned Earth orbital test of Orion interplanetary vehicle.
2015
United States DSCOVR – 11 February 2015 – Solar observation
United States Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission – 13 March 2015 – Magnetospheric research