Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2017 in spaceflight

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2017 in spaceflight
Cassini portrait of Saturn, backlit by the Sun
Peggy Whitson in the International Space Station's Cupola module
A Falcon 9 awaiting launch at Kennedy LC-39A
A Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III launching from Sriharikota Second
Highlights from spaceflight in 2017[a]
Orbital launches
First5 January
Last26 December
Total91
Successes83
Failures6
Partial failures2
Catalogued86
National firsts
Satellite
Rockets
Maiden flights
Retirements
Crewed flights
Orbital4
Total travellers11
EVAs10
2017 in spaceflight
← 2016
2018 →
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
2030s
 

Notable spaceflight activities in 2017 included themaiden orbital flight of India'sGeosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III (also called LVM3) on 5 June and the first suborbital test ofRocket Lab'sElectron rocket, inaugurating theMahia spaceport in New Zealand. The rocket is named for its innovativeRutherford engine which feeds propellants viabattery-powered electric motors instead of the usualgas generator andturbopumps.

Overview

[edit]

China launched its new missile-derivedKaituozhe-2 variant on 2 March. The JapaneseSS-520, a suborbitalsounding rocket modified for orbital flight, failed to reach orbit in January.[1] If successful, it would have become the smallest and lightest vehicle to ever put an object in orbit.[2]

The venerable RussianSoyuz-U workhorse was retired after its 786th mission on 22 February. On 30 March, theSES-10 mission was launched with a previously flownFalcon 9 first stage, achieving a key milestone in theSpaceX reusable launch system development program; several otherFalcon 9 first-stage boosters were re-used since then.

After a record-breaking 13-year mission observingSaturn, itsrings andmoons, theCassini space probe wasdeliberately destroyed by plunging intoSaturn's atmosphere, on 15 September 2017.[3]

A record number of 466 satellites were attempted to be launched thanks to an increase in the number of small satellites. 289 of all satellites weighted less than 10 kg.[4] The number of small satellites launched exceeded even the most optimistic forecasts.[5]

Orbital launches

[edit]
Date and time (UTC)RocketFlight numberLaunch siteLSP
Payload
(⚀ =CubeSat)
OperatorOrbitFunctionDecay (UTC)Outcome
Remarks

January

[edit]
5 January
15:18
ChinaLong March 3B/E3B-Y39[6]ChinaXichang LC-2[6]ChinaCASC
ChinaTJS-2CNSAGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
9 January
04:11:12
ChinaKuaizhou 1AChinaJiuquan LS-95AChinaCASIC
ChinaJilin-1 Video-03 (Lingqiao 1-03)[7]Chang Guang Satellite TechnologyLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
China Caton-1CNSALow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
China Xingyun Shiyan 1CNSALow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
14 January
17:54:39
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-029United StatesVandenbergSLC-4EUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesIridium NEXT 1–10IridiumLow EarthCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Return to flight mission for Falcon 9 after anaccident in September 2016. First stage landed on a drone ship.
14 January
23:33
JapanSS-520[8]JapanUchinouraJapanJAXA
JapanTRICOM-1University of TokyoLow EarthTechnology demonstration14 JanuaryLaunch failure
Contact lost at +20 sec after launch. Aborted ignition of 2nd stage.[1]
21 January
00:42
United StatesAtlas V 401AV-066United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-41United StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesUSA-273 /SBIRSGEO-3US Air ForceGeosynchronousMissile warningIn orbitOperational
24 January
07:44
JapanH-IIA 204F32JapanTanegashimaLA-Y1JapanMHI
JapanDSN-2DSN /JSDFGeosynchronousCommunications (military)In orbitOperational
28 January
01:03:34
RussiaSoyuz ST-B /Fregat-MTFranceKourouELSFranceArianespace
SpainHispasat AG1HispasatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
First GTO launch bySoyuz at the Guiana Space Centre

February

[edit]
14 February
21:39
FranceAriane 5 ECAVA235FranceKourouELA-3FranceArianespace
United StatesIntelsat 32e /
BrazilSkyBrasil-1
Intelsat /SKY BrasilGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
IndonesiaTelkom-3STelkomGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
15 February
03:58
IndiaPSLV-XLC37IndiaSatish DhawanFLPIndiaISRO
IndiaCartosat-2DISROLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
IndiaINS-1A, 1BISROLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
KazakhstanAl-Farabi 1KazGULow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
IsraelBGUSATBen Gurion UniversityLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration24 February 2023[9]Successful
SwitzerlandDIDO-2SpacePharmaLow Earth (SSO)Microgravity researchIn orbitOperational
United StatesFlock-3p × 88Planet LabsLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
United StatesLemur-2 × 8Spire GlobalLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
United Arab Emirates Nayif 1EIAST/AUSLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
Israel/Germany/Netherlands/Belgium PEASSPEASS ConsortiumLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
Second largest number of satellites launched on a single rocket (104).
19 February
14:38:59
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-030United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesSpaceX CRS-10NASALow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics19 March 2017, 14:46Successful
First SpaceX launch from LC-39A. Carries theSAGE III andLightning Imaging Sensor (LIS) Earth-observation instruments to the ISS. First stage returned toLanding Zone 1.
22 February
05:58
RussiaSoyuz-UKazakhstanBaikonurSite 1/5RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaProgress MS-05 / 66PRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics20 JulySuccessful
786th and final flight of Soyuz-U.

March

[edit]
1 March
17:50
United StatesAtlas V 401AV-068United StatesVandenbergSLC-3EUnited StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesUSA-274 /Intruder 8NROLow EarthReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
NROL-79 mission.
2 March
23:53
ChinaKaituozhe-2ChinaJiuquanChinaCASIC
ChinaTiankun-1CASICLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration7 July 2023[10]Successful
Maiden flight.
7 March
01:49:24
ItalyVegaFranceKourouELVFranceArianespace
Sentinel-2BESALow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
16 March
06:00
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-031United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesEchostar 23EchoStarGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Due to the satellite's heavy mass (~5,600 kg),[11] the rocket flew in itsexpendable configuration and the first-stage booster was not recovered.[12]
17 March
01:20:00
JapanH-IIA 202F33JapanTanegashimaLA-Y1JapanMHI
JapanIGS-Radar 5CSICELow Earth (SSO)ReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
19 March
00:18
United StatesDelta IV M+(5,4)United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-37BUnited StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesUSA-275 /WGS-9US Air ForceGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
30 March
22:27
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-032United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
LuxembourgSES-10SES S.A.GeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
First flight of a Falcon 9re-used first stage.[13] SpaceX recovered the stage again.

April

[edit]
12 April
11:04:04
ChinaLong March 3B/E3B-Y43[6]ChinaXichang LC-2[6]ChinaCASC
ChinaShijian 13[14]CNSAGeosynchronousCommunications
Technology demonstration
In orbitOperational
18 April
15:11
United StatesAtlas V 401AV-070United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-41United StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesCygnus CRS OA-7
SSJohn Glenn[15]
NASALow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics12 June 2017Successful
United States Altair 1Millennium Space SystemsLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United StatesIceCubeGSFCLow EarthTechnology demonstration
Atmospheric research
3 October 2018[16]Successful
United States CSUNSat 1CSUNLow EarthTechnology demonstration5 May 2019[17]Successful
United StatesCXBN 2MSULow EarthX-ray astronomy1 March 2019[18]Successful
United States/Australia/Canada/United Kingdom SHARC (Biarri-Point)Project Biarri /AFRLLow EarthTechnology demonstration4 May 2019[19]Successful
 QB50 × 31VariousLow EarthTechnology demonstration
Atmospheric research
In orbitOperational
QB50 mission includes firstFinnish satellite Aalto-2,Greek satelliteUPSat
20 April
07:13:44
RussiaSoyuz-FGKazakhstanBaikonurSite 1/5RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaSoyuz MS-04 / 50SRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)Expedition 51/523 September 2017
01:22
Successful
Crewed flight with two cosmonauts.[20]
20 April
11:41:35
ChinaLong March 7Y2[22]ChinaWenchang LC-2ChinaCASC
ChinaTianzhou 1CMSALow Earth (Tiangong 2)Tiangong 2 resupply22 September 2017
10:00
Successful
ChinaSilkRoad-1 / Silu 1[21]Xi'an Institute of Surveying and MappingLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
SilkRoad-1 was released on 1 August fromTianzhou 1.[21]

May

[edit]
1 May
11:15
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-033United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesNROL-76 / USA-276NROLow Earth[23]ReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
First stage returned toLanding Zone 1.
4 May
21:50
FranceAriane 5 ECAVA236FranceKourouELA-3FranceArianespace
South KoreaKoreasat-7KT CorporationGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
BrazilSGDC-1TelebrasGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
5 May
11:27
IndiaGSLV Mk IIF09IndiaSatish DhawanSLPIndiaISRO
IndiaGSAT-9ISROGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
15 May
23:21
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-034United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United KingdomInmarsat-5 F4InmarsatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Due to the satellite's heavy mass (6,070 kg),[24] the rocket flew in itsexpendable configuration and the first-stage booster was not recovered.[12]
18 May
11:54:53
RussiaSoyuz ST-A /Fregat-MT[25]FranceKourouELSFranceArianespace
LuxembourgSES-15SES S.A.GeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
25 May
04:20:00
United StatesElectronIt's a TestNew ZealandMahia LC-1AUnited StatesRocket Lab
United StatesIt's a TestRocket LabLow EarthRocket stage /Flight test25 MayLaunch failure
First Electron launch. Flight terminated by range safety at an altitude of 224 kilometres (139 mi) due to an error in ground tracking equipment. Carried instruments on the upper stage rather than a payload.[26]
25 May
06:33
RussiaSoyuz-2.1b /Fregat-MRussiaPlesetskSite 43/4RussiaRVSN RF
RussiaEKS-2VKSMolniyaMissile early warningIn orbitOperational

June

[edit]
1 June
00:17:46
JapanH-IIA 202F34JapanTanegashimaLA-Y1JapanMHI
JapanQZS-2 (Michibiki 2)CAOTundra/Quasi-Zenith Orbit[27]NavigationIn orbitOperational
1 June
23:45
FranceAriane 5 ECAVA237FranceKourouELA-3FranceArianespace
United StatesViaSat-2ViaSatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
FranceEutelsat 172BEutelsatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
This mission carried the heaviest and most expensive commercial payload ever launched, valued at $800 million[28] with a combined payload mass of 9,969 kg for both satellites (10,865 kg total launch mass with dual-deployment hardware).[29]
3 June
21:07
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-035United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesSpaceX CRS-11NASALow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics3 July 2017Successful
United StatesNICER[31]NASALow Earth (ISS)X-ray astronomyIn orbitOperational
BangladeshBRAC ONNESHABRACULow EarthTechnology demonstration6 May 2019[32]Successful
GhanaGhanaSat-1All Nations UniversityLow EarthTechnology demonstration22 May 2019[33]Successful
MongoliaMazaalaiNational University of MongoliaLow EarthTechnology demonstration11 May 2019[34]Successful
NigeriaNigeria EduSat-1FUTALow EarthTechnology demonstration13 May 2019[35]Successful
JapanTOKIKITLow EarthTechnology demonstration3 May 2019[36]Successful
First stage returned toLanding Zone 1.TOKI,GhanaSat-1,Mazaalai,BRAC ONNESHA, andNigeria EduSat-1 were carried to ISS as the cargo ofSpaceX CRS-11 and deployed into orbit on 7 July 2017.[30] 100th rocket launch fromLC-39A.
5 June
11:58
IndiaGSLV Mk IIID1IndiaSatish DhawanSLPIndiaISRO
IndiaGSAT-19ISROGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Maiden orbital flight.
8 June
03:45
RussiaProton-M /Briz-M935-61[37]KazakhstanBaikonurSite 81/24RussiaUnited StatesInternational Launch Services
United StatesEchostar 21EchoStarGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
14 June
09:20
RussiaSoyuz-2.1aKazakhstanBaikonurSite 31/6RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaProgress MS-06 / 67PRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics28 DecemberSuccessful
RussiaSfera-53 2Low EarthRadar calibration target29 November 2018[40]Successful
Russia Tanyusha-YuZGU 1South-West State UniversityLow EarthTechnology demonstration30 July 2019[41]Successful
Russia Tanyusha-YuZGU 2South-West State UniversityLow EarthTechnology demonstration8 September 2019[42]Successful
Russia TNS-0 2RISDELow EarthTechnology demonstration15 October 2019[43]Successful
Tanyusha-YuZGU, Sfera-53 2, TNS-O No. 2 were small satellites deployed into orbit from the ISS by cosmonauts during an EVA on 17 August 2017.[38][39]
15 June
03:15
ChinaLong March 4B4B-Y31[44]ChinaJiuquanSLS-2ChinaCASC
ChinaHXMTCAS /IHEPLow Earth (SSO)X-ray astronomyIn orbitOperational
ChinaZhuhai-1 01Zhuhai Orbital Control EngineeringLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
ChinaZhuhai-1 02Zhuhai Orbital Control EngineeringLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
ArgentinaÑuSat 3SatellogicLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
China CAS-4ACNSALow Earth (SSO)CommunicationsIn orbitOperational
China CAS-4BCNSALow Earth (SSO)CommunicationsIn orbitOperational
18 June
16:12
ChinaLong March 3B/E3B-Y28[6]ChinaXichang LC-2ChinaCASC
ChinaChinaSat 9A (Zhongxing-9A)[47]China SatcomGeosynchronous (intended)CommunicationsIn orbitPartial launch failure Operational
Payload was inserted into a wrong orbit.[45][46] After 16 days of orbit raising maneuvers, the satellite raised its orbit from 16,420 km to 36,000 km, and corrected its longitude to 101.4°E.[citation needed]
23 June
03:59[49]
IndiaPSLV-XLC38IndiaSatish DhawanFLPIndiaISRO
IndiaCartosat-2EISROLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
JapanCE-SAT 1CanonLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
ItalyMax Valier SatMax Valier school, BozenLow Earth (SSO)X-ray astronomy
Technology demonstration
In orbitOperational
IndiaNIUSATNoorul Islam UniversityLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
LatviaVenta-1Ventspils University CollegeLow Earth (SSO)AIS ship trackingIn orbitOperational
FinlandAalto-1Aalto UniversityLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
United StatesAustraliaIsraelBlue DiamondSky and Space GlobalLow Earth (SSO)CommunicationsIn orbitOperational
United StatesAustraliaIsraelGreen DiamondSky and Space GlobalLow Earth (SSO)CommunicationsIn orbitOperational
United StatesAustraliaIsraelRed DiamondSky and Space GlobalLow Earth (SSO)CommunicationsIn orbitOperational
United StatesCICERO-6GeoOptics IncLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
GermanyCOMPASS-2FH AachenLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
ItalyD-SATD-OrbitLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United KingdomInflateSailUniversity of SurreyLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration3 September 2017
01:27
Successful
United StatesLemur-2 × 8Spire GlobalLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
LithuaniaLituanicaSAT-2Vilnius UniversityLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
ChinaNUDTSatNUDTLow Earth (SSO)Ionosphere researchIn orbitOperational
Austria PegasusFH Wiener NeustadtLow Earth (SSO)Thermosphere researchIn orbitOperational
FranceROBUSTA-1BUniversity of MontpellierLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
SlovakiaskCUBEUniversity of ZilinaLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
ChileSUCHAI-1University of ChileLow Earth (SSO)Ionosphere researchIn orbitOperational
United StatesTyvak-53bTyvak Nano-Satellite SystemsLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration14 March 2023[50]Successful
United KingdomUCLSatUniversity College LondonLow Earth (SSO)Ionosphere researchIn orbitOperational
ItalyURSA MAIORSapienza UniversityLow Earth (SSO)Thermosphere researchIn orbitOperational
Czech RepublicVZLUSat-1VZLULow Earth (SSO)Thermosphere researchIn orbitOperational
Venta-1 was the first Latvian satellite. COMPASS-2, InflateSail, LithuanicaSAT-2, NUDTSat, Pegasus, UCLSat, URSA MAIOR and VZLUSat-2 are part of the QB-50 project led byVon Karman Institute to create a network of cubesats conducting measurements of Earth's lower termosphere and ionosphere.[48]
23 June
18:04
RussiaSoyuz-2-1v /VolgaRussiaPlesetskSite 43/4RussiaRVSN RF
RussiaKosmos 2519VKSLow EarthGeodesy23 December 2021[52]Successful
RussiaKosmos 2521VKSLow EarthTechnology demonstration12 September 2019[53]Successful
Napryazhenie / 14F150 / Nivelir.[51] Kosmos 2521, also known as Sputnik Inspektor, was later deployed by Kosmos 2519.
23 June
19:10
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-036United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
BulgariaBulgariaSat-1BulsatcomGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Second flight of a Falcon 9re-used first stage.[54]
25 June
20:25:14
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-037United StatesVandenbergSLC-4EUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesIridium NEXT 11–20IridiumLow EarthCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
28 June
20:59
FranceAriane 5 ECAVA238FranceKourouELA-3FranceArianespace
United KingdomEuropaSat /
GreeceHellas Sat 3
InmarsatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
IndiaGSAT-17ISROGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational

July

[edit]
2 July
11:23:23
ChinaLong March 5Y2[56]ChinaWenchang LC-1ChinaCASC
ChinaShijian 18[14]CASTGeosynchronousCommunications
Technology demonstration
2 July 2017Launch failure
The cause of the failure was confirmed by CASC later, related to the anomaly happened on one of the YF-77 engine in the first stage.[55]
5 July
23:38
United StatesFalcon 9 Full Thrust[58]F9-038United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesIntelsat 35eIntelsatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Due to the satellite's heavy mass (6,761 kg),[57] the rocket flew in itsexpendable configuration and the first-stage booster was not recovered.[12]
14 July
06:36:49
RussiaSoyuz-2.1a /Fregat-MKazakhstanBaikonurSite 31/6RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaKanopus-V-IK[64]RoscosmosLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
United StatesCICERO × 3GeoOpticsLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
GermanyFlying LaptopInstitute of Space SystemsLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
NorwayNORSAT-1Norsk RomsenterLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
NorwayNORSAT-2Norsk RomsenterLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
GermanyTechnoSatTU BerlinLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
JapanWNISAT-1RWeathernewsLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
United StatesCorvus-BC 1, 2 (Lanmapper-BC 1, 2)Astro DigitalLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitFailure[65]
Ecuador/RussiaEcuador-UTE-YuZGUUTE /YuZGULow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United StatesFlock-2k × 48Planet LabsLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
RussiaIskra-MAI-85MAILow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United StatesLemur-2 × 8Spire GlobalLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
RussiaMayakMPULow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitPartial failure
RussiaMKA-N × 2Roscosmos /Dauria AerospaceLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitFailure[60][66]
United StatesNanoACETyvak Nano-Satellite SystemsLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
Delivery of 73 satellites in three orbital altitudes with a single launch.[59] Some cubesats were deployed into unintended orbit or having communication problem.[60] Mayak fails to deploy solar reflector.[61] Glavcosmos has later confirmed upper stage anomaly during the launch.[62][63]
27 JulyIranSimorghIranSemnanIranISA
ISALow Earth27 July 2017Launch failure
The first orbital attempt forSimorgh.[67] Iranian official sources state that the rocket has reached orbit.[68][69]U.S. Strategic Command confirmed that no satellite deployed from the rocket as the rocket suffered a "catastrophic failure" shortly after liftoff.[70][71] TheU.S. Air Force'sJoint Space Operations Center atVandenberg Air Force Base reported that it had not detected any satellite released into low-Earth orbit by the Simorgh SLV.[72] Finally, the United States, France, Germany and Britain have condemned Iran's test of a satellite-launching rocket.[73]
28 July[74]
15:41[75]
RussiaSoyuz-FGKazakhstanBaikonurSite 1/5RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaSoyuz MS-05 / 51SRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)Expedition 52/5314 December 2017
08:48
Successful
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts.

August

[edit]
2 August
01:58
ItalyVegaFranceKourouELVFranceArianespace
ItalyOPTSAT-3000Italian Defense MinistryLow Earth (SSO)IMINT (Reconnaissance)In orbitOperational
Israel /FranceVENμSISA /CNESLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
14 August
16:31
United StatesFalcon 9 Block 4F9-039United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesSpaceX CRS-12NASALow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics17 September 2017Successful
United StatesOSIRIS-3UPenn StateLow EarthSpace weather7 March 2019[81]Successful
United States Kestrel Eye 2MU.S. ArmyLow EarthReconnaissance28 August 2021[82]Successful
United StatesDellingr/RBLEGSFCLow EarthTechnology demonstration /HeliophysicsIn orbitOperational
United StatesASTERIAMIT/JPLLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitSuccessful[83]
First flight of Falcon 9 "block 4" upgrade.[76] Last flight of a newly-built Dragon capsule; further missions will use refurbished spacecraft.[77] Carried cosmic-ray detectorISS-CREAM to be installed on the station, and several cubesats to be later deployed from the ISS. Kestrel Eye was deployed into orbit from ISS on 24 October 2017.[78] ASTERIA and Dellingr/RBLE were deployed on 20 November 2017,[79] and OSIRIS-3U was deployed on 21 November 2017.[80]
16 August
22:07
RussiaProton-M /Briz-M?[37]KazakhstanBaikonurSite 81/24RussiaRVSN RF
RussiaBlagovest-11L[84]VKSGeosynchronousCommunications (military)In orbitOperational
18 August
12:29
United StatesAtlas V 401AV-074United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-41United StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesTDRS-MNASAGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
19 August
05:29
JapanH-IIA 204F35JapanTanegashimaLA-Y1JapanMHI
JapanQZS-3CAOGeosynchronousNavigationIn orbitOperational
24 August
18:50
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-040United StatesVandenbergSLC-4EUnited StatesSpaceX
TaiwanFormoSat-5NSPOLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
26 August
06:04
United StatesMinotaur IV / Orion 38United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-46United StatesOrbital ATK
United StatesORS-5ORSLow EarthSpace surveillanceIn orbitOperational
31 August
13:30
IndiaPSLV-XLC39IndiaSatish DhawanFLPIndiaISRO
IndiaIRNSS-1HISROGeosynchronousNavigation2 March 2019Launch failure
Payload fairing failed to separate, leaving the satellite adrift within the fairing after internally separating from the fourth stage of the rocket.[85] The stage, along with IRNSS-1H, re-entered the atmosphere together on 2 March 2019.[86]

September

[edit]
7 September
14:00
United StatesFalcon 9 Block 4F9-041United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesX-37B /OTV-5 / USA-277U.S. Air ForceLow EarthTechnology demonstration (classified)27 October 2019
07:51
Successful[87]
11 September
19:23:41
RussiaProton-M /Briz-M935-65[37]KazakhstanBaikonurSite 200/39RussiaUnited StatesInternational Launch Services
SpainAmazonas 5HispasatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
12 September
21:17:02
RussiaSoyuz-FGKazakhstanBaikonurSite 1/5RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaSoyuz MS-06 / 52SRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)Expedition 53/54In orbitOperational
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts.[20][88]
22 September
00:02:32
RussiaSoyuz-2.1b /Fregat-MRussiaPlesetskSite 43/4RussiaRVSN RF
RussiaKosmos 2522 /GLONASS-M752VKSMedium EarthNavigationIn orbitOperational
24 September
05:49:47
United StatesAtlas V 541AV-072United StatesVandenbergSLC-3EUnited StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesNROL-42 /Trumpet / USA-278NROLow EarthReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
28 September
18:52:16
RussiaProton-M /Briz-M937-03[37]KazakhstanBaikonurSite 200/39RussiaUnited StatesInternational Launch Services
Hong KongAsiaSat 9AsiaSatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
29 September
04:21
ChinaLong March 2C2C-Y29[89]ChinaXichang LC-3ChinaCASC
China Yaogan-30 ACASLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
China Yaogan-30 BCASLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
China Yaogan-30 CCASLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
29 September
21:47
FranceAriane 5 ECAVA239FranceKourouELA-3FranceArianespace
United StatesIntelsat 37eIntelsatGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
JapanBSAT-4aBSATGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational

October

[edit]
9 October
04:13
ChinaLong March 2D2D-Y30[89]ChinaJiuquanSLS-2ChinaCASC
VenezuelaVRSS-2ABAE /MPPCTIILow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
9 October
12:37
United StatesFalcon 9 Block 4F9-042United StatesVandenbergSLC-4EUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesIridium NEXT 21–30IridiumLow EarthCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
9 October
22:01:37
JapanH-IIA 202F36JapanTanegashimaLA-Y1JapanMHI
JapanQZS-4CAOTundraNavigationIn orbitOperational
11 October
22:53
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-043United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
LuxembourgSES-11 /
United StatesEchoStar 105
SES S.A. /EchoStarGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Third time a Falcon 9first stage is re-used.[90]
13 October
09:27:44
RussiaRokot /Briz-KMRussiaPlesetskSite 133/3France /RussiaEurockot
Sentinel-5 PrecursorESALow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
14 October
08:46:53
RussiaSoyuz-2.1aKazakhstanBaikonurSite 31/6RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaProgress MS-07 / 68PRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics26 April 2018Successful
Russia/India Iskra 5Moscow Aviation Institute / Space Kidz IndiaLow EarthCommunications 
Originally intended to debut a new two-orbit rendezvous profile, profile reverted to standard 34-orbit profile after the first launch attempt was scrubbed.[91]
15 October
07:28
United StatesAtlas V 421AV-075United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-41United StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesNROL-52 /Quasar 21 / USA-279NROGeosynchronous (TBC)[92]Communications (military)In orbitOperational
30 October
19:34
United StatesFalcon 9 Block 4F9-044United StatesKennedyLC-39AUnited StatesSpaceX
South KoreaKoreasat 5AKT CorporationGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
31 October
21:37
United StatesMinotaur-CUnited StatesVandenbergLC-576EUnited StatesOrbital ATK
United StatesSkySat × 6Terra BellaLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
United StatesFlock-3m × 4Planet LabsLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
Return to flight mission for Minotaur-C after a failed launch inMarch 2011.

November

[edit]
5 November
11:45:00
ChinaLong March 3B /YZ-13B-Y46[6]ChinaXichangChinaCASC
ChinaBeiDou-3M1CNSAMedium EarthNavigationIn orbitOperational
ChinaBeiDou-3M2CNSAMedium EarthNavigationIn orbitOperational
8 November
01:42:30
ItalyVegaFranceKourouELVFranceArianespace
MoroccoMohammed VI-A (MN35-13)MoroccoLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
12 November
12:19:51[94]
United StatesAntares 230United StatesMARSLP-0AUnited StatesOrbital ATK
United StatesCygnus CRS OA-8E
SSGene Cernan[95]
NASALow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics18 December 2017Successful
United States AeroCube (OSCD) × 2The Aerospace CorporationLow EarthTechnology demonstration5 August 2022 (OSCD B)
12 August 2022 (OSCD C)
Successful
United StatesAsgardia-1AsgardiaLow EarthTechnology demonstration12 September 2022[96]Successful
United States CHEFsatNRLLow EarthTechnology demonstration2 January 2022[97]Successful
United StatesEcAMSatNASALow EarthMicrobiology8 December 2021[98]Successful
United States ISARAJPLLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United StatesLemur-2 × 8Spire GlobalLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
United States PropCube 2 (Fauna)[99]NPSLow EarthTechnology demonstration30 July 2022[100]Successful
United StatesTechEdSat-6SJSU/UI/NASA AmesLow EarthTechnology demonstration15 May 2018[101]Successful
EcAMSat was deployed into orbit from ISS on 20 November 2017,[79] and TechEdSat-6 was deployed on 21 November 2017.[80] Other small satellites were deployed from Cygnus after it departed from ISS.[93]
14 November
18:35
ChinaLong March 4C4C-Y21[44]ChinaTaiyuan LA-9[44]ChinaCAST
ChinaFengyun 3D[102]CMALow Earth (polar)MeteorologyIn orbitOperational
China HEAD-1[102]HEAD AerospaceLow Earth (polar)AIS ship trackingIn orbitOperational
18 November
09:47:36
United StatesDelta II 7920United StatesVandenbergSLC-2WUnited StatesUnited Launch Alliance
United StatesNOAA-20NOAALow Earth (SSO)MeteorologyIn orbitOperational
AustraliaBuccaneer RMMUNSW,DSTOLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United StatesEagleSatERAULow Earth (SSO)EducationIn orbitOperational
United StatesMakerSat 0NNULow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
United StatesMiRaTAMITLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
United StatesRadFxSat (Fox 1B)AMSATLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
Last flight of the Delta II 7920 configuration, penultimate flight of Delta II
21 November
04:50
ChinaLong March 6Y2[103]ChinaTaiyuan LA-16ChinaCASC
ChinaJilin-1 Video-04 (Lingqiao 1-04)[104]Chang Guang Satellite TechnologyLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
ChinaJilin-1 Video-05 (Lingqiao 1-05)[104]Chang Guang Satellite TechnologyLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
ChinaJilin-1 Video-06 (Lingqiao 1-06)[104]Chang Guang Satellite TechnologyLow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
24 November
18:10
ChinaLong March 2C2C-Y30[89]ChinaXichangChinaCASC
ChinaYaogan 30-02ACNSALow EarthReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
ChinaYaogan 30-02BCNSALow EarthReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
ChinaYaogan 30-02CCNSALow EarthReconnaissanceIn orbitOperational
28 November
05:41:46[75]
RussiaSoyuz-2.1b /Fregat-MRussiaVostochnySite 1S[106]RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaMeteor-M No. 2-1RoscosmosLow Earth (SSO)Meteorology28 November 2017Launch failure
NorwayAISSat-3NSCLow Earth (SSO)Traffic monitoring28 November 2017Launch failure
RussiaBaumanets 2Bauman UniversityLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration28 November 2017Launch failure
Japan IDEA-OSG 1AstroscaleLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration28 November 2017Launch failure
Canada LEO Vantage 2TeleSat CanadaLow Earth (SSO)Communications (experimental)28 November 2017Launch failure
United StatesCorvus-BC 3Astro DigitalLow Earth (SSO)Earth observation28 November 2017Launch failure
GermanyD-Star OneGerman Orbital SystemsLow Earth (SSO)Communications (experimental)28 November 2017Launch failure
United StatesLemur-2 × 10Spire GlobalLow Earth (SSO)Earth observation28 November 2017Launch failure
SwedenSEAMMultiple usersLow Earth (SSO)Technology demonstration28 November 2017Launch failure
TheFregat upper stage suffered an apparent programming failure resulting in the loss of all 19 satellites.[105]

December

[edit]
2 December
10:43:26
RussiaSoyuz-2.1bRussiaPlesetskRussiaRVSN RF
Russia Kosmos-2524 (Lotos No. 2 803)Low EarthELINTIn orbitOperational
3 December
04:11
ChinaLong March 2D2D-Y47[89]ChinaJiuquan LC-43ChinaCASC
ChinaLKW-1[107]CASLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
10 December
16:41[108]
ChinaLong March 3B3B-Y40[6]ChinaXichang LC-2ChinaCAST
AlgeriaAlcomsat-1Algerian Space AgencyGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
First Algerian geostationary communications satellite
12 December
18:36:07
FranceAriane 5 ESVA240FranceKourouELA-3FranceArianespace
GalileoFOC 15-18ESAMedium EarthNavigationIn orbitOperational
Second Galileo launch with Ariane 5 (9th overall), carryingNicole,Zofia,Alexandre, andIrina.
15 December
15:36
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-045United StatesCape CanaveralSLC-40United StatesSpaceX
United StatesSpaceX CRS-13NASALow Earth (ISS)ISS logistics13 January 2018Successful
Re-used thefirst-stage booster fromCRS-11 (2017) and the Dragon capsule fromCRS-6 (2015)[109]
17 December
07:21
RussiaSoyuz-FGKazakhstanBaikonurSite 1/5RussiaRoscosmos
RussiaSoyuz MS-07 / 53SRoscosmosLow Earth (ISS)Expedition 54/55In orbitOperational
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts.
23 December
01:26:22[110]
JapanH-IIA 202F37JapanTanegashimaLA-Y1JapanMHI
JapanGCOM-CJAXALow Earth (SSO)Earth observationIn orbitOperational
JapanSLATSJAXALow EarthAtmospheric sciences
Technology demonstration
1 October 2019Successful
23 December
01:27:23[75]
United StatesFalcon 9 Full ThrustF9-046United StatesVandenbergSLC-4EUnited StatesSpaceX
United StatesIridium NEXT 31–40IridiumLow EarthCommunicationsIn orbitOperational
Re-using afirst-stage booster.[111] This rocket flew in itsexpendable configuration so the first-stage booster was not recovered[112]
23 December
04:14[113]
ChinaLong March 2D2D-Y48[89]ChinaJiuquan LC-43ChinaCASC
ChinaLKW-2CASLow EarthEarth observationIn orbitOperational
25 December
19:44
ChinaLong March 2C2C-Y34[89]ChinaXichang LC-3ChinaCASC
ChinaYaogan-30 GCASLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
ChinaYaogan-30 HCASLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
ChinaYaogan-30 JCASLow EarthTechnology demonstrationIn orbitOperational
26 December
19:00:03
UkraineZenit-3F /RussiaFregat-SBKazakhstanBaikonurSite 45/1RussiaS7 Space[116]
AngolaAngoSat 1Republic of AngolaGeosynchronousCommunicationsIn orbitSpacecraft failure[117]
First satellite of Angola. Launch was successful but contact was lost quickly afterwards.[114] On 28 December 2017, communication was temporarily restored and telemetry was received.[115]

Suborbital flights

[edit]
Date and time (UTC)RocketFlight numberLaunch siteLSP
Payload
(⚀ =CubeSat)
OperatorOrbitFunctionDecay (UTC)Outcome
Remarks
15 JanuaryChinaDF-5CChinaTaiyuan Satellite Launch CenterChinaPLARF
PLARFSuborbitalMissile test15 JanuarySuccessful
16 JanuaryRussiaRS-12M TopolRussia PlesetskRussia RVSN
RVSNSuborbitalMissile test16 JanuarySuccessful
23 January
02:30
BrazilVSB-30SwedenEsrangeGermanyDLR /SwedenSSC
Germany /SwedenMAIUS-1[118]DLR /SSCSuborbitalMicrogravity23 JanuarySuccessful
Apogee: 238 kilometres (148 mi)
24 JanuaryPakistanAbabeelPakistan ?PakistanASFC
ASFCSuborbitalMissile test24 JanuarySuccessful
25 JanuaryIsraelBlack SparrowIsraelF-15 Eagle,IsraelIsraelIAF
IAI/IDFSuborbitalMissile test target25 JanuarySuccessful
DST-5 target, successfully intercepted
25 JanuaryIsraelStunnerIsraelPalmachim AirbaseIsrael IAF
IAI/IDFSuborbitalMissile test25 JanuarySuccessful
DST-5 interceptor
27 January
13:45:00
CanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesPoker Flat Research RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States PolarNOxVirginia TechSuborbitalThermosphere research27 JanuarySuccessful
Apogee: 283 kilometres (176 mi).[119]
29 JanuaryIranKhorramshahrIranSemnanIranAFIRI
AFIRISuborbitalMissile test29 JanuaryLaunch failure
The missile flew about 600 miles before exploding. Test of a reentry vehicle failed.[120]
4 February
8:30:00
United States MRBMSFTM-01United StatesPacific Missile Range FacilityUnited StatesMDA
United States SFTM-01 TargetMDASuborbitalABM target4 FebruarySuccessful
Ballistic missile target for interception[121]
4 February
~8:30:00
United StatesSM-3SFTM-01United StatesUSS John Paul Jones, KauaiUnited StatesMDA
United States SFTM-01 InterceptorMDASuborbitalABM test4 FebruarySuccessful
Ballistic missile interceptor[121]
9 February
7:38:59
United StatesMinuteman-IIIUnited StatesVandenberg Air Force Base LF-10United StatesUS Air Force
US Air ForceSuborbitalTest flight9 FebruarySuccessful
11 February[122]
22:55
North KoreaPukguksong-2North KoreaKusongNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test11 FebruarySuccessful
Apogee: 550 kilometres (340 mi).
16 FebruaryUnited StatesUGM-133 Trident IIUnited StatesUSS Ohio (SSGN-726),Pacific Missile Range FacilityUnited StatesUS Navy
US NavySuborbitalMissile test16 FebruarySuccessful
Follow-on Commander's Evaluation Test 53
16 FebruaryUnited StatesUGM-133 Trident IIUnited StatesUSS Ohio (SSGN-726),Pacific Missile Range FacilityUnited StatesUS Navy
US NavySuborbitalMissile test16 FebruarySuccessful
Follow-on Commander's Evaluation Test 53
16 FebruaryUnited StatesUGM-133 Trident IIUnited StatesUSS Ohio (SSGN-726),Pacific Missile Range FacilityUnited StatesUS Navy
US NavySuborbitalMissile test16 FebruarySuccessful
Follow-on Commander's Evaluation Test 53
16 FebruaryUnited StatesUGM-133 Trident IIUnited StatesUSS Ohio (SSGN-726),Pacific Missile Range FacilityUnited StatesUS Navy
US NavySuborbitalMissile test16 FebruarySuccessful
Follow-on Commander's Evaluation Test 53
22 February
10:14:00
CanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesPoker Flat Research RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States ISINGLASSDartmouth CollegeSuborbitalIonosphere research22 FebruarySuccessful
[123]
1 MarchCanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesPoker Flat Research RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States JETSGoddard Space Flight CenterSuborbitalMagnetosphere research1 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 330 kilometres (210 mi).[124]
1 MarchCanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesPoker Flat Research RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States JETSGoddard Space Flight CenterSuborbitalMagnetosphere research1 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 190 kilometres (120 mi).[124]
1 MarchCanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesPoker Flat Research RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States ISINGLASSDartmouth CollegeSuborbitalIonosphere research1 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 365 kilometres (227 mi).[124]
5 March[122]
22:34
North KoreaHwasong-9 (Scud-ER)North KoreaSohaeNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test5 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 260 kilometres (160 mi). 1 of 4.
5 March[122]
22:34
North KoreaHwasong-9 (Scud-ER)North KoreaSohaeNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test5 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 260 kilometres (160 mi). 2 of 4.
5 March[122]
22:34
North KoreaHwasong-9 (Scud-ER)North KoreaSohaeNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test5 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 260 kilometres (160 mi). 3 of 4.
5 March[122]
22:34
North KoreaHwasong-9 (Scud-ER)North KoreaSohaeNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test5 MarchSuccessful
Apogee: 260 kilometres (160 mi). 4 of 4.
17 MarchSouth KoreaHyunmoo-2BSouth Korea Anheung Test SiteSouth KoreaADD
ADDSuborbitalMissile test17 MarchSuccessful
4 April[122]
21:42
North KoreaHwasong-12North KoreaSinpo ShipyardNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test4 AprilFailure
Apogee: 189 kilometres (117 mi).
7 April
09:30
EuropeMaxusSwedenEsrangeEuropeEuroLaunch
/Sweden MAXUS-9ESA /SSCSuborbitalMicrogravity7 AprilSuccessful
Apogee: 678 kilometres (421 mi)[125]
26 AprilUnited StatesMinuteman-IIIUnited StatesVandenberg Air Force Base LF-09United StatesUS Air Force
US Air ForceSuborbitalTest flight26 AprilSuccessful
27 AprilIndiaAgni-IIIIndiaITRIC-4IndiaIndian Army
Indian ArmySuborbitalMissile test27 AprilSuccessful
Apogee: 350 kilometres (220 mi)
3 MayUnited StatesMinuteman-IIIUnited StatesVandenberg Air Force Base LF-04United StatesUS Air Force
US Air ForceSuborbitalTest flight3 MaySuccessful
4 MayIndiaAgni IIIndiaIntegrated Test RangeIndiaIndian Army /DRDO
Indian Army/DRDOSuborbitalMissile test4 MaySuccessful
5 MayCanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesWhite Sands Missile RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States RAISE 3Southwest Research InstituteSuborbitalSolar research5 MaySuccessful
Apogee: 296 kilometres (184 mi).[126]
13 MayBrazilVSB-30SwedenEsrangeGermanyDLR /SwedenSSC
GermanyMAPHEUS-6DLRSuborbitalTechnology demonstration13 MaySuccessful
Apogee: 254 kilometres (158 mi)
14 MayNorth KoreaHwasong-12[129]North KoreaKusongNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile Test14 MaySuccessful
Apogee: 2,111 kilometres (1,312 mi)[127][128]
16 MayCanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesWallops Flight FacilityUnited StatesNASA
United States SubTec-7NASASuborbitalTechnology demonstration16 MaySuccessful
Apogee: 248 kilometres (154 mi).[130]
21 May[122]
07:59
North KoreaPukguksong-2North Korea Yonpung LakeNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test21 MayFailure
Apogee: 560 kilometres (350 mi).
28 May[122]
20:40
North KoreaHwasong-6 MaRV versionNorth KoreaWonsan AirportNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaManeuverable reentry vehicleKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test28 MaySuccessful
Apogee: 120 kilometres (75 mi).
30 MayUnited States ICBM-T2FTG-15United StatesRonald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test SiteUnited StatesMDA
United States FTG-15 targetMDASuborbitalABM target30 MaySuccessful
Ballistic missile target for interception
30 MayUnited StatesGBI-OBVFTG-15United StatesVandenberg Air Force BaseUnited StatesMDA
United States FTG-15 interceptorMDASuborbitalABM test30 MaySuccessful
Ballistic missile interceptor
14 JuneUnited States Sabre Zombi (ATACMS)United StatesWhite Sands Missile RangeUnited States NASA
US ArmySuborbitalMissile test14 JuneSuccessful
Apogee: 80 kilometres (50 mi)?
22 June
9:20
United States MRBMSFTM-02United StatesPacific Missile Range FacilityUnited StatesMDA
United States SFTM-02 targetMDASuborbitalABM target22 JuneSuccessful
Ballistic missile target for interception
22 June
~9:20
United StatesSM-3SFTM-02United StatesUSS John Paul Jones, KauaiUnited StatesMDA
United States SFTM-02 interceptorMDASuborbitalABM test22 JuneFailure
Ballistic missile interceptor, failed to intercept the target[131]
22 JuneUnited StatesTerrier-Improved OrionUnited StatesWallops Flight FacilityUnited StatesNASA
United States RockOnUniversity of ColoradoSuborbitalStudent payloads22 JuneSuccessful
Apogee: 116 kilometres (72 mi).[132]
23 JuneSouth KoreaHyunmoo-2CSouth KoreaAnheung Test SiteSouth KoreaADD
ADDSuborbitalMissile test17 MarchSuccessful
26 JuneRussiaRSM-56 BulavaRussiaK-535Yury Dolgorukiy, White SeaRussiaVMF
VMFSuborbitalMissile test26 JuneSuccessful
27 JuneCanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesWhite Sands Missile RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States CHESS-3University of ColoradoSuborbitalUV Astronomy27 JuneSuccessful
29 JuneUnited StatesTerrier-Improved MalemuteUnited StatesWallops Flight FacilityUnited StatesNASA
United States Ampoule Test LaunchNASASuborbitalIonosphere research29 JuneSuccessful
Apogee: 190 kilometres (120 mi).[133]
30 JuneBrazilVSB-30AustraliaWoomera Test RangeAustraliaDSTO
Australia /United StatesHiFire-4DSTO /BoeingSuborbitalTechnology demonstration30 JuneSuccessful
Successful experimental hypersonic vehicle flight test, exceeded expectations in flight control performance.[134]
3 JulyNorth KoreaHwasong-14[135]North KoreaPanghyon[122]North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile Test3 JulySuccessful
Apogee: 2,803 kilometres (1,742 mi). First confirmed North Korean ICBM test.
11 JulyUnited States IRBM-T1 ?FFT-18United StatesC-17, Pacific OceanUnited States MDA
United StatesMDASuborbitalABM target11 JulySuccessful
Apogee: 500 kilometres (310 mi), successfully intercepted
11 JulyUnited StatesTHAADFFT-18United StatesKodiakUnited States US Army
United StatesUS Army/MDASuborbitalABM test11 JulySuccessful
Intercepted target missile, apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi)
23 JulyChinaB-611ChinaShuangchengziChinaPLA
PLASuborbitalABM target23 JulySuccessful
Target
23 JulyChinaDN-3ChinaJiuquan Satellite Launch CenterChinaPLARF
PLARFSuborbitalABM test23 JulyLaunch failure[citation needed]
28 JulyNorth KoreaHwasong-14[136]North Korea Mupyong-ni Arms Factory[122]North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile Test28 JulySuccessful
Apogee: 3,700 kilometres (2,300 mi).
29 JulyJapanMomoJapanTaiki Aerospace Research FieldJapanInterstellar Technologies
Interstellar TechnologiesSuborbitalTest flight29 JulyLaunch failure
Communications were lost just over one minute into the flight, resulting in an early shutdown of the engine.[137]
30 JulyUnited States eMRBM ?FET-01United StatesC-17, Pacific OceanUnited States MDA
United StatesMDASuborbitalABM target30 JulySuccessful
Apogee: 300 kilometres (190 mi), successfully intercepted
30 JulyUnited StatesTHAADFET-01United StatesKodiakUnited States US Army
United StatesUS Army/MDASuborbitalABM test30 JulySuccessful
Intercepted target missile, apogee: 100 kilometres (62 mi)
2 August
09:10
United StatesMinuteman-IIIUnited StatesVandenberg Air Force Base LF-10United StatesUS Air Force
US Air ForceSuborbitalMissile test2 AugustSuccessful
13 August
09:30
United StatesTerrier-Improved MalemuteUnited StatesWallops Flight FacilityUnited StatesNASA
United States RockSat-XNASASuborbitalStudent experiments13 AugustSuccessful
Apogee: 151 kilometres (94 mi).[138]
23 AugustChinaDF-4ChinaTaiyuan Satellite Launch CenterChinaPLARF
PLARFSuborbitalMissile test23 AugustSuccessful
29 AugustNorth KoreaHwasong-12[139]North KoreaPyongyang International AirportNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test29 AugustSuccessful
Apogee: 550 kilometres (340 mi).[139]
29 AugustUnited States MRBM-T3 ?FTM-27 E2United StatesPacific Missile Range FacilityUnited States MDA
MDASuborbitalABM target29 AugustSuccessful
FTM-27 E2 target, successfully intercepted by SM-6 missile in low altitude
9 September
11:34
CanadaBlack Brant IXMarshall IslandsKwajalein AtollUnited StatesNASA
United States WINDYNASASuborbitalIonosphere research9 SeptemberSuccessful
Apogee: 409 kilometres (254 mi).[140]
9 September
11:39
United StatesTerrier MalemuteMarshall IslandsKwajalein AtollUnited StatesNASA
United States WINDYNASASuborbitalIonosphere research9 SeptemberPartial failure[140]
Useful data was not obtained.[140]
12 SeptemberRussiaRS-24 YarsRussia PlesetskRussiaRVSN
RVSNSuborbitalMissile test12 SeptemberSuccessful
14 SeptemberNorth KoreaHwasong-12North KoreaPyongyang International AirportNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test14 SeptemberSuccessful
Apogee: 770 kilometres (480 mi).[141]
17 SeptemberUnited States PTVUnited StatesRonald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test SiteUnited StatesOrbital ATK
United States Patriot target vehicleSMCSuborbitalABM target17 SeptemberSuccessful
Ballistic missile target for interception
17 SeptemberUnited StatesMIM-104 PatriotUnited StatesRonald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test SiteUnited StatesSMC
SMCSuborbitalABM test17 SeptemberSuccessful
Ballistic missile interceptor
20 SeptemberRussiaRS-24 YarsRussia PlesetskRussiaRVSN
RVSNSuborbitalMissile test20 SeptemberSuccessful
22 SeptemberIranKhorramshahrIranSemnanIranAFIRI
AFIRISuborbitalMissile test22 SeptemberSuccessful
25 SeptemberUnited StatesTerrier-OrioleUnited Kingdom South Uist, HebridesUnited States MDA
DODSuborbitalRadar-Target25 SeptemberSuccessful
Radar-Target, apogee: ~100 kilometres (62 mi)?
26 SeptemberRussiaRS-12M TopolRussiaKapustin YarRussiaRVSN
RVSNSuborbitalMissile test26 SeptemberSuccessful
4 October
11:45
CanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesWallops Flight FacilityUnited StatesNASA
United States ASPIRENASASuborbitalTechnology demonstration4 OctoberSuccessful
TestedMars 2020's parachute
15 OctoberUnited StatesTerrier-OrioleFS-17 E4United Kingdom South Uist, HebridesUnited States MDA
DODSuborbitalABM target15 OctoberSuccessful
SM-3 Target, apogee: ~100 kilometres (62 mi)?
15 OctoberUnited StatesSM-3FS-17 E4United StatesUSS Donald Cook (DDG-75), Hebrides RangeUnited States US Navy
US NavySuborbitalABM test15 OctoberSuccessful
Second Aegis-Test in the North Atlantic, successful intercept, apogee: ~100 kilometres (62 mi)?
26 OctoberRussiaRS-12M Topol[142][143]RussiaPlesetskRussiaRVSN
RVSNSuborbitalMissile test26 OctoberSuccessful
26 OctoberRussiaR-29R VolnaRussia Russian submarine,Sea of OkhotskRussia VMF
VMFSuborbitalMissile test26 OctoberSuccessful
26 OctoberRussiaR-29R VolnaRussia Russian submarine,Sea of OkhotskRussia VMF
VMFSuborbitalMissile test26 OctoberSuccessful
26 OctoberRussiaR-29RMU SinevaRussia Russian submarine,Barents SeaRussiaVMF
VMFSuborbitalMissile test26 OctoberSuccessful
30 OctoberUnited States UGM-27 Polaris (STARS)United States Barking SandsLC-42United StatesUS Navy
United States CPS FE-1US NavySuborbitalTechnology30 OctoberSuccessful
Conventional Prompt Strike Flight Experiment-1, successful hypersonic glide vehicle test
30 October
10:00
CanadaBlack Brant IXUnited StatesWhite Sands Missile RangeUnited StatesNASA
United States DEUCENASASuborbitalAstronomy30 OctoberPartial failure
Black Brant rocket performed flawlessly but science data was not obtained.[144]
16 NovemberUnited States Sabre Zombi (ATACMS)[145]United States Fort Bliss McGregor RangeUnited States NASA
US ArmySuborbitalMissile test16 NovemberSuccessful
Apogee: 80 kilometres (50 mi)?
28 November[122]
18:18
North KoreaHwasong-15North KoreaPyongsongNorth KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic Force
North KoreaKorean People's Army Strategic ForceSuborbitalMissile test28 NovemberSuccessful
Apogee: 4,475 kilometres (2,781 mi).
4 DecemberIsraelBlack SparrowIsraelF-15 Eagle,IsraelIsraelIAF
IAI/IDFSuborbitalMissile test target4 DecemberLaunch failure
Arrow-III interceptor launch was called off after launch failure of the target missile[146]
12 DecemberUnited StatesNew ShepardUnited StatesCorn RanchUnited StatesBlue Origin
United StatesNew Shepard crew capsuleBlue OriginSuborbitalTest flight12 DecemberSuccessful
Flight test with new capsule[147]
26 December
03:30
RussiaRS-12M TopolRussiaKapustin YarRussiaRVSN
RVSNSuborbitalMissile test26 DecemberSuccessful

Deep-space rendezvous

[edit]
Date (UTC)SpacecraftEventRemarks
2 FebruaryJuno4thperijove ofJupiterA decision was made to cancel a period reduction maneuver and remain in a 53-day orbit for the remainder of the mission over engine concerns.[148]
27 MarchJuno5th perijove
22 April[149]Cassini127th flyby ofTitanClosest approach: 979 kilometres (608 mi).
19 MayJuno6th perijove
11 JulyJuno7th perijove
1 SeptemberJuno8th perijove
15 SeptemberCassiniEnd of missionIntentional destructive entry intoSaturn's atmosphere
23 SeptemberOSIRIS-RExFlyby of EarthGravity assist to accelerate the probe towards its destination
24 OctoberJuno9th perijove
16 DecemberJuno10th perijove

Extravehicular activities (EVAs)

[edit]
Start date/timeDurationEnd timeSpacecraftCrewRemarks
6 January
12:23
6 hours
31 minutes
18:54Expedition 50
ISSQuest
The crew completed the installation of new batteries on the station's power channel 3A, and then executed a series of tasks to get ahead for the next EVA. Kimbrough collected photos of theAMS-02, then they removed a broken light on theS3 truss and routed Ethernet cables on theZ1 truss.
13 January
11:22
5 hours
58 minutes
17:20Expedition 50
ISSQuest
The crew completed the installation of new batteries on the station's power channel 1A, and then executed a series of get ahead tasks. First they installed a new camera on the Mobile Transporter Relay Assembly, then Pesquet replaced a Worksite Interface Adapter onCanadarm-2 and collected photos ofZ1 truss andS0 truss, meanwhile Kimbrough removed 2 handrails from theDestiny module. Then they picked up a bundle of covers and brought them to theTranquillity module where will be installed whenPressurized Mating Adapter 3 will be moved fromNode 3 toNode 2. When removed, the PMA'sCommon Berthing Mechanism will be covered up to protect it from the space environment.
24 March
11:24
6 hours
34 minutes
17:58Expedition 50
ISSQuest
Kimbrough replaced the External Control Zone 2 (EXT-2) multiplexer–demultiplexer (MDM) with an upgraded "EPIC MDM" and preparedPMA-3 for its robotic relocation on Sunday. Pesquet inspected the Radiator Beam Valve Module for ammonia leaks, then lubricated one of theLatching End Effectors ofDextre. Kimbrough then replaced a pair of cameras on theKibo module, and a light on one of the CETA carts.
30 March
11:29
7 hours
4 minutes
18:33Expedition 50
ISSQuest
Kimbrough replaced the External Control Zone 1 (EXT-1) multiplexer–demultiplexer (MDM) with an upgraded "EPIC MDM" while Whitson connected heater power and heater feedback telemetry to enablePMA-3 to be repressurized, then released a series of straps to free up a cover that protected theAPAS. The astronauts then installed axial shields on PMA-3's former location onTranquillity module and installed covers on PMA-3. One of the shields was lost but the others were installed successfully.[150]
12 May
13:01[151]
4 hours
13 minutes
17:21Expedition 51
ISSQuest
  • EXT-1 MDM remove and replace
  • Lab EWC antenna install
23 May
11:20[152]
2 hours
46 minutes
14:06Expedition 51
ISSQuest
Throughout this hurriedly planned "contingency" spacewalk, both Fischer and Whitson successfully replaced a failed multiplexer–demultiplexer (MDM), and installed a pair of antennas on station to enhance wireless communication for future spacewalks.[153]
17 August
14:36[154]
7 hours
34 minutes
22:10Expedition 52
ISSPirs
  • Test of an upgraded version of the Orlan space suit, theOrlan MKS
  • Restavratsiya retrieval
  • Deployment of 5 small satellites
  • Impakt installation
  • Adapter installation onPoisk sensors
  • BKDO (БКДО) reposition
  • Test sample collection
  • Hand rail and exposure init installation
5 October
12:05
6 hours
55 minutes
19:00Expedition 53
ISSQuest
  • Removal ofLEE-A fromSSRMS
  • Removal of POA LEE via 6 EDF bolts
  • Installation of POA LEE as new SSRMS LEE-A
  • Installation of former LEE-A on POA
  • SSRMS power-up and checkout
10 October
11:56
6 hours
26 minutes
18:22Expedition 53
ISSQuest
  • ESP-1 PFCS rotate by 90°
  • CP9 camera group R/R
  • LEE-A ballscrew lubrication
  • POA LEE socket removal
  • MT camera lens replacement
  • Hand rail removal (x2)
20 October
11:47
6 hours
49 minutes
18:36Expedition 53
ISSQuest
  • Dextre EOTP fuse replacement
  • Canadarm2 LEE-A CLA remove and replace
  • CP3 HD camera installation
  • MLI removal fromORUs (x2)

Orbital launch statistics

[edit]

By country

[edit]

For the purposes of this section, the yearly tally of orbital launches by country assigns each flight to the country oforigin of the rocket, not to the launch services provider or the spaceport. For example,Soyuz launches by Arianespace in Kourou are counted under Russia becauseSoyuz-2 is a Russian rocket.

CountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial
failures
 China181611
 France6600
 India5410
 Iran1010
 Italy3300
 Japan7610
 Russia20[b]1811
 Ukraine1[c]100
 United States30[d]2910
World918362

By rocket

[edit]
5
10
15
20

By family

[edit]
FamilyCountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Antares United States1100
Ariane France6600
Atlas United States6600
Delta United States2200
Electron United States1010Maiden flight
Falcon United States181800
GSLV India1100
GSLV Mk III India1100First orbital flight
H-II Japan6600
Kaituozhe China1100
Kuaizhou China1100
Long March China161411
Minotaur United States2200
PSLV India3210
R-7 Russia151311
S-Series Japan1010
Simorgh Iran1010First orbital flight
Universal Rocket Russia5500
Vega Italy3300
Zenit Ukraine1100

By type

[edit]
RocketCountryFamilyLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Antares 200 United StatesAntares1100
Ariane 5 FranceAriane6600
Atlas V United StatesAtlas6600
Delta II United StatesDelta1100
Delta IV United StatesDelta1100
Electron United StatesElectron1010Maiden flight
Falcon 9 United StatesFalcon181800
GSLV IndiaGSLV1100
GSLV Mk III IndiaGSLV Mk III1100First orbital flight
Kaituozhe-2 ChinaKaituozhe1100Maiden flight
Kuaizhou 1 ChinaKuaizhou1100
Minotaur IV United StatesMinotaur1100
Minotaur-C United StatesMinotaur1100
H-IIA JapanH-II6600
Long March 2 ChinaLong March6600
Long March 3 ChinaLong March5401
Long March 4 ChinaLong March2200
Long March 5 ChinaLong March1010
Long March 6 ChinaLong March1100
Long March 7 ChinaLong March1100
PSLV IndiaPSLV3210
Proton RussiaUniversal Rocket4400
SS-520 JapanS-Series1010
Simorgh IranSimorgh1010First orbital flight
Soyuz RussiaR-75500
Soyuz-2 RussiaR-710811
UR-100 RussiaUniversal Rocket1100
Vega ItalyVega3300
Zenit-3 UkraineZenit1100

By configuration

[edit]
RocketCountryTypeLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Antares 230 United StatesAntares 2001100
Ariane 5 ECA FranceAriane 55500
Ariane 5 ES FranceAriane 51100
Atlas V 401 United StatesAtlas V4400
Atlas V 421 United StatesAtlas V1100
Atlas V 541 United StatesAtlas V1100
Delta II 7920 United StatesDelta II1100Final flight
Delta IV Medium+ (5,4) United StatesDelta IV1100
Electron United StatesElectron1010Maiden flight
Falcon 9 Full Thrust United StatesFalcon 9141400
Falcon 9 Block 4 United StatesFalcon 94400Maiden flight
GSLV Mk II IndiaGSLV1100
GSLV Mk III IndiaGSLV Mk III1100First orbital flight
H-IIA 202 JapanH-IIA4400
H-IIA 204 JapanH-IIA2200
Kaituozhe-2 ChinaKaituozhe-21100Maiden flight
Kuaizhou 1A ChinaKuaizhou1100
Long March 2C ChinaLong March 23300
Long March 2D ChinaLong March 23300
Long March 3B/E ChinaLong March 35401
Long March 4B ChinaLong March 41100
Long March 4C ChinaLong March 41100
Long March 5 ChinaLong March 51010Maiden flight
Long March 6 ChinaLong March 61100
Long March 7 ChinaLong March 71100
Minotaur IV /Orion 38 United StatesMinotaur IV1100
Minotaur-C United StatesMinotaur-C1100
Proton-M /Briz-M RussiaProton4400
PSLV-XL IndiaPSLV3210
Rokot /Briz-KM RussiaUR-1001100
SS-520-4 JapanS-Series1010Maiden flight
Simorgh IranSimorgh1010First orbital flight
Soyuz-FG RussiaSoyuz4400
Soyuz-U RussiaSoyuz1100Final flight
Soyuz-2.1a or ST-A RussiaSoyuz-22200
Soyuz 2.1a or ST-A /Fregat-M RussiaSoyuz-22101
Soyuz-2.1b or ST-B /Fregat-M RussiaSoyuz-24310
Soyuz-2.1b or ST-B /Fregat-MT RussiaSoyuz-21100
Soyuz-2-1v /Volga RussiaSoyuz-21100
Vega ItalyVega3300
Zenit-3F UkraineZenit-31100

By spaceport

[edit]
5
10
15
20
25
30
China
France
India
Iran
Japan
Kazakhstan
New Zealand
Russia
United States
SiteCountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Baikonur Kazakhstan131201
Cape Canaveral United States7700
Jiuquan China6600
Kennedy United States121200
Kourou France111100
Mahia New Zealand1010First launch
MARS United States1100
Plesetsk Russia5500
Satish Dhawan India5410
Semnan Iran1010
Taiyuan China2200
Tanegashima Japan6600
Uchinoura Japan1010
Vandenberg United States9900
Vostochny Russia1010
Wenchang China2110
Xichang China8701
Total918362

By orbit

[edit]
10
20
30
40
50
60
  •   Transatmospheric
  •   Low Earth
  •   Low Earth (ISS)
  •   Low Earth (SSO)
  •   Low Earth (polar)
  •   Medium Earth
  •   Geosychronous
    (transfer)
  •   High Earth
  •   Heliocentric
Orbital regimeLaunchesAchievedNot achievedAccidentally
achieved
Remarks
Transatmospheric0000
Low Earth524840including 13 toISS, 1 toTiangong-2
Geosynchronous /transfer333120
Medium Earth3301IRNSS-1H did not separate from rocket's second stage, and was stuck in an elliptical orbit with 6000 km apogee
High Earth3300includinghighly ellipticalTundra orbits
Total918561

References

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^Clockwise from top:
  2. ^Includes twoEuropean Soyuz launches fromKourou,French Guiana byArianespace.
  3. ^Zenit launch from Baikonur byS7 Space
  4. ^Includes oneElectron launch failure fromMahia byRocket Lab

Citations

  1. ^ab"SS-520 4号機実験結果について" (Press release) (in Japanese).JAXA. 15 January 2017.Archived from the original on 18 January 2017. Retrieved29 January 2017.
  2. ^Clark, Stephen."Launch of experimental Japanese rocket scrubbed – Spaceflight Now".Archived from the original on 11 January 2017. Retrieved11 January 2017.
  3. ^"Cassini, NASA's 13-year Saturn mission, has ended". 15 September 2017.Archived from the original on 15 September 2017. Retrieved15 September 2017.
  4. ^"Final score for 2017: 466 – a new record for the number of satellites attempted to be launched in a single year".Seradata. 31 December 2017.Archived from the original on 5 January 2019. Retrieved4 January 2019.
  5. ^"New companies needed to maintain small satellite market growth".SpaceNews. 31 January 2018.Archived from the original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved4 January 2019.
  6. ^abcdefgKrebs, Gunter."CZ-3 (Chang Zheng-3)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 15 November 2014. Retrieved30 December 2018.
  7. ^Krebs, Gunter."Jilin-1 Video-03".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 11 January 2019. Retrieved10 January 2019.
  8. ^SS-520 4号機実験の実施について (in Japanese). JAXA. 8 December 2016.Archived from the original on 8 December 2016. Retrieved22 December 2016.
  9. ^"BGUSAT".N2YO.com. 24 February 2023. Retrieved4 March 2023.
  10. ^"TK-1".N2YO.com. 1 July 2023. Retrieved19 August 2023.
  11. ^Krebs, Gunter."EchoStar 23".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 30 January 2017. Retrieved16 April 2017.
  12. ^abcKrebs, Gunter."Falcon-9 v1.2(ex) (Falcon-9FT(ex))".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 1 August 2020. Retrieved16 April 2017.
  13. ^Masunaga, Samantha (30 August 2016)."SpaceX signs first customer for launch of a reused rocket".Los Angeles Times.Archived from the original on 8 December 2020. Retrieved29 October 2016.
  14. ^ab"China to launch advanced propulsion and laser communications satellites in 2017".Global Times. 17 February 2017. Archived fromthe original on 18 March 2017. Retrieved17 March 2017.
  15. ^Ray, Justin (9 March 2017)."Next Cygnus commercial space freighter christened the S.S. John Glenn". Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 9 March 2017. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  16. ^"ICECUBE".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 4 February 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  17. ^"CSUNSAT1".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 4 February 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  18. ^"CXBN-2".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 6 August 2020. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  19. ^"SHARC".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 3 November 2017. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  20. ^abKlotz, Irene (16 November 2016)."NASA, Russia Set Flights for Trimmed-Down Space Station Crew".space.com.Archived from the original on 15 September 2017. Retrieved21 November 2016.
  21. ^abKrebs, Gunter."SilkRoad-1 01 (Silu 1)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved18 August 2017.
  22. ^Krebs, Gunter."CZ-7 (Chang Zheng-7)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 30 November 2020. Retrieved30 December 2018.
  23. ^Clark, Stephen (24 May 2017)."Observers spot top secret satellite launched by SpaceX earlier this month".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 9 May 2019. Retrieved25 May 2017.
  24. ^Krebs, Gunter."Inmarsat-5 F1, 2, 3, 4".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 2 May 2017. Retrieved16 April 2017.
  25. ^"Building on its 2016 successes, Arianespace looks to the future with confidence at the service of its customers" (Press release).Arianespace. 4 January 2017.Archived from the original on 9 January 2017. Retrieved8 January 2017.
  26. ^Clark, Stephen (13 August 2017)."Rocket Lab finishes test flight inquiry, plans second launch later this year".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 13 August 2017. Retrieved14 August 2017.
  27. ^"Quasi-Zenith Satellite Orbit (QZO)". Cabinet Office, Government of Japan.Archived from the original on 9 March 2018. Retrieved4 October 2017.
  28. ^"Two high-power broadband satellites set for record-breaking launch on Ariane 5 rocket".Spaceflight Now. 1 June 2017.Archived from the original on 26 June 2018. Retrieved1 June 2017.
  29. ^"Arianespace marks its 2017 mid-year launch milestone with a record-setting Ariane 5 mission at the service of ViaSat and Eutelsat" (Press release).Arianespace. 1 June 2017.Archived from the original on 6 June 2017. Retrieved2 June 2017.
  30. ^"BIRDS-1 constellation of five CubeSats deployed".AMSAT-UK. 7 July 2017.Archived from the original on 16 May 2021. Retrieved16 May 2021.
  31. ^"The Neutron star Interior Composition ExploreR Mission".NASA.Archived from the original on 13 May 2017. Retrieved26 February 2016.Previously scheduled for a December 2016 launch on SpaceX-12, NICER will now fly to the International Space Station with two other payloads on SpaceX Commercial Resupply Services (CRS)-11, in the Dragon vehicle's unpressurized Trunk.
  32. ^"BIRD BB".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 4 February 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  33. ^"BIRD GG".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 4 February 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  34. ^"BIRD MM".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 28 July 2020. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  35. ^"BIRD NN".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 20 September 2020. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  36. ^"BIRD JJ".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 4 February 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  37. ^abcdKrebs, Gunter."Proton (UR-500) family".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 12 January 2012. Retrieved28 October 2018.
  38. ^"Russian Cosmonauts Deploy Satellites".AMSAT-UK. 17 August 2017.Archived from the original on 20 April 2018. Retrieved20 April 2018.
  39. ^"Progress MS-06 arrives at ISS".RussianSpaceWeb.Archived from the original on 6 April 2018. Retrieved20 April 2018.
  40. ^"SFERA 1".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 26 November 2017. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  41. ^"TANYUSHA 1".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 3 July 2019. Retrieved12 August 2019.
  42. ^"TANYUSHA 2".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 14 November 2021. Retrieved14 November 2021.
  43. ^"TNS 0-2".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 14 November 2021. Retrieved14 November 2021.
  44. ^abcKrebs, Gunter."CZ-4 (Chang Zheng-4)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved30 December 2018.
  45. ^"New broadcasting satellite fails to enter preset orbit".Xinhua. 19 June 2017. Archived fromthe original on 19 June 2017. Retrieved19 June 2017.
  46. ^"Report on the launch of Chinasat-9A".China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation. 19 June 2017.Archived from the original on 24 June 2017. Retrieved19 June 2017.
  47. ^Jones, Andrew (1 June 2017)."China set for X-ray observatory, orbital refueling, GLEX and Long March 5 mission in June".GBTimes. Archived fromthe original on 5 June 2017. Retrieved4 June 2017.
  48. ^"THE PROJECT".www.qb50.eu. Archived fromthe original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved4 September 2016.
  49. ^Graham, William (22 June 2017)."PSLV rocket launches Cartosat 2E and 30 small sats".NASASpaceFlight. Retrieved31 March 2023.
  50. ^"TYVAK 53B".N2YO.com. 14 March 2023. Retrieved31 March 2023.
  51. ^Zak, Anatoly (4 March 2017)."Spooky world of military satellites".RussianSpaceWeb.Archived from the original on 7 August 2012. Retrieved17 June 2017.
  52. ^"Russian military satellite that worked with inspector spacecraft burns in atmosphere".TASS. 23 December 2021.Archived from the original on 24 December 2021. Retrieved24 December 2021.
  53. ^"COSMOS 2521".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 14 November 2021. Retrieved14 November 2021.
  54. ^Clark, Stephen (5 May 2017)."Bulgaria's first communications satellite to ride SpaceX's second reused rocket".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 6 May 2017. Retrieved5 May 2017.
  55. ^"Casc Confirms Cause Of Long March 5 Failure". Aviation Week. 2 March 2018.Archived from the original on 21 December 2018. Retrieved2 August 2018.
  56. ^Krebs, Gunter."CZ-5 (Chang Zheng-5)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved30 December 2018.
  57. ^Clark, Stephen."Intelsat 35e".SpaceFlightNow.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved2 July 2017.
  58. ^Clark, Stephen (30 August 2016)."SES agrees to launch satellite on 'flight-proven' Falcon 9 rocket".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 31 August 2016. Retrieved31 August 2016.Intelsat, one of the world's largest geostationary satellite operators alongside SES, has one launch reserved on a newly-built Falcon 9 rocket in the first quarter of 2017, when the Intelsat 35e satellite will launch from Cape Canaveral.
  59. ^"Launch Success – Russia's Soyuz Delivers 73 Satellites in Complex Multi-Orbit Mission".Spaceflight 101. 14 July 2017.Archived from the original on 16 July 2017. Retrieved16 July 2017.
  60. ^abDebra Werner (29 August 2017)."Soyuz launch customers search for cause of cubesat failures".Archived from the original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved15 September 2017.
  61. ^"Mayak 'Lighthouse in the Sky' Fails to Deploy Solar Reflector".Spaceflight 101. 9 August 2017.Archived from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved9 August 2017.
  62. ^"Glavcosmos confirmed launch anomaly".gazeta.ru. 12 March 2018.Archived from the original on 12 March 2018. Retrieved13 March 2018.
  63. ^""Роскосмос" против частников: куда улетели 300 миллионов".Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  64. ^"Smallsats have been successfully integrated with Fregat upper stage at Baikonur cosmodrome".Glavkosmos. 6 July 2017. Archived fromthe original on 13 July 2017. Retrieved13 July 2017.
  65. ^Debra Werner (13 September 2017)."Astro Digital announces first cubesats launched on Soyuz failed".Archived from the original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved15 September 2017.
  66. ^"Dauria Aerospace is investigating the cause of the MKA-N satellites failure". Dauria Aerospace.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved15 September 2017.
  67. ^"Simorgh (Safir-2)".space.skyrocket.de.Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  68. ^"Iran: Space Program Claims a Successful Launch Into Orbit".Stratfor.Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  69. ^Trevithick, Joseph (27 July 2017)."Iran Officially Opens Expanded Space Center With Simorgh Rocket Launch".Archived from the original on 11 July 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  70. ^"Simorgh - Missile Threat".Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  71. ^Tomlinson, Lucas (28 July 2017)."Iran rocket suffered 'catastrophic failure,' likely blew up, US official says".Fox News.Archived from the original on 16 August 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  72. ^Sheldon, John (31 July 2017)."Iran Launches Simorgh: Act of Defiance to the U.S. or Legitimate SLV Test?".SpaceWatch.Global.Archived from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved13 July 2019.
  73. ^"Nuclear deal signatories condemn Iran's 'satellite rocket' launch". 29 July 2017.Archived from the original on 12 September 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  74. ^Pietrobon, Steven (18 December 2017)."Russian Launch Manifest".Archived from the original on 10 July 2016. Retrieved18 December 2017.
  75. ^abcClark, Stephen (14 December 2017)."Launch schedule".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 24 December 2016. Retrieved18 December 2017.
  76. ^Graham, William (14 August 2017)."SpaceX Falcon 9 launches CRS-12 Dragon mission to the ISS".NASASpaceFlight.com.Archived from the original on 15 August 2017. Retrieved14 August 2017.
  77. ^Gebhardt, Chris (26 July 2017)."TDRS-M given priority over CRS-12 Dragon as launch dates realign".NASASpaceFlight.com.Archived from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved26 July 2017.
  78. ^"NanoRacks Successfully Deploys First Customer Microsatellite from ISS, Largest to Date".nanoracks.com. 24 October 2017.Archived from the original on 19 April 2018. Retrieved19 April 2018.
  79. ^ab"ISS Daily Summary Report – 11/20/2017". NASA. 20 November 2017.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved22 November 2017.
  80. ^ab"ISS Daily Summary Report – 11/21/2017". NASA. 21 November 2017.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved8 December 2017.
  81. ^"OSIRIS-3U".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 29 March 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  82. ^Jonathan McDowell [@planet4589] (2 September 2021)."The US Army's small KestrelEye-II-M imaging satellite reentered on Aug 28. The satellite was deployed from the ISS in Oct 2017 and does not appear to have had a propulsion system, as can be seen from its steady orbital decay" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  83. ^"Tiny Satellite for Studying Distant Planets Goes Quiet".Jet Propulsion Laboratory.NASA. 3 January 2020.Archived from the original on 7 January 2020. Retrieved4 January 2020.
  84. ^Zak, Anatoly (17 August 2017)."Proton launches first Blagovest military comsat".RussianSpaceWeb.Archived from the original on 19 September 2017. Retrieved17 August 2017.
  85. ^"IRNSS-1H launch highlights: Mission unsuccessful, says ISRO chief".The Indian Express. 31 August 2017.Archived from the original on 24 August 2019. Retrieved24 August 2019.
  86. ^"IRNSS 1H/PSLV".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 13 December 2019. Retrieved24 August 2019.
  87. ^Erwin, Sandra (27 October 2019)."Air Force X-37B secret spaceplane lands after 780 days in orbit".SpaceNews.Archived from the original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved27 October 2019.
  88. ^Huot, Daniel (21 February 2017)."Additional Crew Flights Boost Space Station Science and Research".NASA.gov.Archived from the original on 28 February 2017. Retrieved27 February 2017.
  89. ^abcdefKrebs, Gunter."CZ-2 (Chang Zheng-2)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved30 December 2018.
  90. ^Clark, Stephen (4 August 2017)."SES agrees to launch another satellite on previously-flown Falcon 9 booster".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved4 August 2017.
  91. ^"Progress MS-07 docks after missing out on record rendezvous option – NASASpaceFlight.com".www.nasaspaceflight.com. 16 October 2017.Archived from the original on 12 October 2017. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  92. ^Graham, William (15 October 2017)."Atlas V finally launches with NROL-52".NASASpaceFlight.com.Archived from the original on 13 October 2017. Retrieved15 October 2017.
  93. ^"NanoRacks Completes 4th External Cargo Ship Satellite Deployment Mission, Largest to Date".nanoracks.com. 7 December 2017.Archived from the original on 20 April 2018. Retrieved19 April 2018.
  94. ^Clark, Stephen (12 November 2017)."Space station cargo shipment blasts off aboard Antares rocket".Spaceflight Now.Archived from the original on 17 April 2019. Retrieved8 February 2022.
  95. ^"S.S. Gene Cernan"(PDF). Orbital ATK. 18 October 2017. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 26 October 2017. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  96. ^"ASGARDIA 1".N2YO.com. 12 September 2022.Archived from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved20 September 2022.
  97. ^"CHEFSAT".N2YO.com. 2 January 2022.Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved11 January 2022.
  98. ^"ECAMSAT".N2YO.com. 8 December 2021.Archived from the original on 15 December 2021. Retrieved14 December 2021.
  99. ^Krebs, Gunter (27 January 2018)."PropCube 1, 2, 3 (Flora, Fauna, Merryweather)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 18 August 2022. Retrieved18 August 2022.
  100. ^"FAUNA".N2YO.com. 30 July 2022.Archived from the original on 18 August 2022. Retrieved18 August 2022.
  101. ^"TECHEDSAT 6".N2YO.com.Archived from the original on 29 March 2018. Retrieved19 August 2019.
  102. ^abRui C. Barbosa (14 November 2017)."Long March 4C launches Fengyun-3D and HEAD-1 co-passenger". NASA Spaceflight.Archived from the original on 16 November 2017. Retrieved15 November 2017.
  103. ^Krebs, Gunter."CZ-6 (Chang Zheng-6)".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved30 December 2018.
  104. ^abcKrebs, Gunter."Jilin-1 Video-04, ..., 12".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 11 January 2019. Retrieved10 January 2019.
  105. ^William Graham (27 November 2017)."Soyuz 2-1B launch with Meteor-M ends in apparent Fregat-M failure". NASA Spaceflight.Archived from the original on 28 November 2017. Retrieved3 December 2017.
  106. ^"Two launches from Russia's new Vostochny space center due this year — Roscosmos".TASS. 12 April 2017.Archived from the original on 16 May 2017. Retrieved28 May 2017.
  107. ^Barbosa, Rui C. (2 December 2017)."Long March 2D lofts latest Yaogan Weixing satellite – named LKW-1".Archived from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved3 December 2017.
  108. ^"Chinese Long March 3B lofts Alcomsat-1 for Algeria – NASASpaceFlight.com".www.nasaspaceflight.com. 10 December 2017.Archived from the original on 10 December 2017. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  109. ^Graham, William (14 December 2017)."Flight proven Falcon 9 launches previously flown Dragon to ISS".NASASpaceFlight.com.Archived from the original on 8 February 2021. Retrieved15 December 2017.
  110. ^"Launch Time and Window, H-IIA F37 (with upgraded function) Encapsulating SHIKISAI and TSUBAME". JAXA. 21 December 2017.Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved21 December 2017.
  111. ^Gebhardt, Chris (19 October 2017)."Iridium-4 switches to flight-proven Falcon 9, RTLS at Vandenberg delayed".NASASpaceFlight.com.Archived from the original on 23 March 2021. Retrieved19 October 2017.
  112. ^@NASASpaceflight (19 December 2017)."Confirmation the Iridium-4 Falcon 9 booster is expendable" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  113. ^Pietrobon, Steven (11 December 2017)."Chinese Launch Manifest".Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved14 December 2017.
  114. ^Krebs, Gunter."AngoSat 1".Gunter's Space Page.Archived from the original on 17 January 2018. Retrieved1 May 2017.
  115. ^"Источник: со спутником "Ангосат" восстановлена связь".Archived from the original on 25 August 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  116. ^"ANGOSAT-1".S7 Space.Archived from the original on 26 October 2018. Retrieved26 October 2018.
  117. ^"No Signs of Life from Russian-built AngoSat, Troubleshooting to Resume in April – Spaceflight101".spaceflight101.com. 15 January 2018.Archived from the original on 12 September 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  118. ^"MAIUS 1 – First Bose-Einstein condensate generated in space". 24 January 2017. Archived fromthe original on 5 December 2017. Retrieved16 May 2017.
  119. ^Koehler, Keith (27 January 2017)."NASA Sounding Rocket Successfully Launches into Alaskan Night".NASA.Archived from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved11 February 2017.
  120. ^Buncombe, Andrew (1 February 2017)."US officially puts Iran on notice after ballistic missile launch, says Donald Trump's national security adviser".The Independent.Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved27 August 2017.
  121. ^ab"US, Japan Successfully Conduct First SM-3 Block IIA Intercept Test".Missile Defense Agency. 4 February 2017. Archived fromthe original on 4 December 2017. Retrieved20 February 2017.
  122. ^abcdefghijk"The CNS North Korea Missile Test Database".Nuclear Threat Initiative. Retrieved17 January 2025.
  123. ^Koehler, Keith (22 February 2017)."One Down, 3 to Go ... Sounding Rocket Flies in Alaska to Study Auroras".NASA.Archived from the original on 25 February 2017. Retrieved24 February 2017.
  124. ^abc"Three Rockets Launched within Hours Explore Auroras over Alaska".NASA. 2 March 2017.Archived from the original on 25 March 2017. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  125. ^"Successful mission by sounding rocket MAXUS-9". 7 April 2017.Archived from the original on 6 August 2017. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  126. ^Garner, Rob (4 August 2017)."NASA-Funded Sounding Rocket Will Take 1,500 Images of Sun in 5 Minutes".NASA.Archived from the original on 18 September 2017. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  127. ^McDowell, Jonathan [@planet4589] (15 May 2017)."NK missile is the Hwasong-12; range was 787 km and apogee 2111 km per KCNA via Yonhap" (Tweet). Retrieved1 July 2017 – viaTwitter.
  128. ^"北 "신형 중장거리미사일 발사 성공"...김정은 "美본토 타격권"(종합)" (in Korean).Yonhap. 15 May 2017.Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved8 August 2017.
  129. ^Panda, Ankit."North Korea's New Intermediate-Range Ballistic Missile, the Hwasong-12: First Takeaways".Archived from the original on 19 June 2017. Retrieved1 July 2017.
  130. ^"SubTec-7 Gives New Technologies a Flight Test".NASA. 16 May 2017.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  131. ^"USS John Paul Jones (DDG 53) History".Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved29 July 2017.
  132. ^"NASA Wallops Successful Launch Rocks with Student Experiments".NASA. 22 June 2017.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  133. ^"NASA Wallops Rocket Launch Lights up the Mid-Atlantic Coast".NASA. 29 June 2017.Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  134. ^"Speeding up hypersonic innovation with HIFiRE 4".Boeing. 10 August 2017.Archived from the original on 19 July 2019. Retrieved13 July 2019.
  135. ^"Hwasong-14".Archived from the original on 1 August 2017. Retrieved6 July 2017.
  136. ^Cohen, Zachary; Starr, Barbara (29 July 2017)."Trump condemns North Korean long-range missile launch".CNN.Archived from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved8 August 2017.
  137. ^Krishna, Swapna (31 July 2017)."Japan's first private rocket launch is a partial success". engadget.com.Archived from the original on 6 June 2019. Retrieved6 August 2017.
  138. ^"RockSat-X Successfully Launches from NASA Wallops".NASA. 13 August 2017.Archived from the original on 14 August 2017. Retrieved14 August 2017.
  139. ^abMcCurry, Justin (29 August 2017)."Trump and Abe vow to increase pressure after North Korea fires missile over Japan".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 3 September 2017. Retrieved30 August 2017.
  140. ^abc"NASA Mission to Study Atmospheric Disturbances from Marshall Islands".NASA. 11 September 2017.Archived from the original on 26 August 2017. Retrieved4 October 2017.
  141. ^Graham, Chris; Boyle, Danny; Connor, Neil (15 September 2017)."North Korea fires second missile over Japan as US tells China and Russia to take 'direct action'".The Telegraph. London.Archived from the original on 17 September 2017. Retrieved17 September 2017.
  142. ^Gady, Franz-Stefan (27 October 2017)."Russia Test Fires 4 Intercontinental-Range Ballistic Missiles".The Diplomat.Archived from the original on 29 October 2017. Retrieved29 October 2017.
  143. ^Podvig, Pavel (26 October 2017)."Annual exercise of strategic forces".Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces.Archived from the original on 27 October 2017. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  144. ^"A Light in the Dark: NASA Sounding Rocket Probes the Dark Regions of Space".NASA. 30 October 2017.Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved30 October 2017.
  145. ^"Zombie".space.skyrocket.de.Archived from the original on 17 July 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  146. ^Gross, Judah Ari (4 December 2017)."Arrow 3 missile test called off over safety concerns".The Times of Israel.Archived from the original on 14 June 2018. Retrieved12 September 2018.
  147. ^"Blue Origin Launches 1st New Shepard Spaceship Test Flight in Over a Year".Space.com. 12 December 2017.Archived from the original on 13 December 2017. Retrieved12 December 2017.
  148. ^Northon, Karen (17 February 2017)."NASA's Juno Mission to Remain in Current Orbit at Jupiter".Archived from the original on 20 February 2017. Retrieved1 July 2017.
  149. ^"Cassini Solstice Mission: Saturn Tour Dates: 2017".saturn.jpl.nasa.gov.Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Archived fromthe original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved6 September 2015.
  150. ^"Spacewalkers Successfully Connect Adapter for Commercial Crew Vehicles". 30 March 2017. Archived fromthe original on 31 March 2017. Retrieved2 September 2019.
  151. ^"Astronauts complete shortened spacewalk outside International Space Station".Archived from the original on 13 May 2017. Retrieved23 May 2017.
  152. ^"Hurriedly planned 'contingency' spacewalk on tap Tuesday".Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved23 May 2017.
  153. ^"Short Spacewalk Complete After Successful Installation Work". Archived fromthe original on 2 June 2020. Retrieved24 May 2017.
  154. ^"Russian Spacewalkers Collect Overtime in Busy EVA for Satellite Release, Sampling & External Outfitting". 17 August 2017.Archived from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved17 August 2017.

External links

[edit]
Generic references:

Spaceflight portal
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
2017 in space
Space probe launchesSpace probes launched in 2017
  • ASTERIA (miniature space telescope; August 2017)


Impact events
SelectedNEOs
ExoplanetsExoplanets discovered in 2017
Discoveries
CometsComets in 2017
Space exploration
Portal:
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2017_in_spaceflight&oldid=1305759781"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp