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2023 in spaceflight

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2023 in spaceflight
Launch of IFT-2, the second Starship flight of the year and first to reach stage separation
Samples of asteroid 101955 Bennu, returned by OSIRIS-REx in 2023
Dinkinesh photographed by the Lucy spacecraft originally launched in 2021
The ISRO Chandrayaan-3 successfully soft-lands on the surface of the Moon in August, making India the fourth country to successfully soft-land on the lunar surface
Highlights from spaceflight in 2023[a]
Orbital launches
First3 January
Last30 December
Total223
Successes211
Failures11
Partial failures1
Catalogued212
National firsts
Spaceflight
 Oman (suborbital spaceflight due to failed orbital launch)
Satellite
Space traveller
Rockets
Maiden flights
Retirements
Crewed flights
Orbital6
Orbital travellers21
Suborbital5
Suborbital travellers30
Total travellers51
2023 in spaceflight
← 2022
2024 →
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
2030s
 

The year 2023 saw rapid growth and significant technical achievements inspaceflight. For the third year in a row, new world records were set for both orbital launch attempts (223) and successful orbital launches (211). The growth in orbital launch cadence can in large part be attributed toSpaceX, as they increased their number of launches from 61 in 2022 to 98 in 2023. The deployment of theStarlink satellitemegaconstellation was a major contributing factor to this increase over previous years. This year also featured numerous maiden launches of new launch vehicles. In particular,SSLV,Qaem 100,Tianlong-2,Chollima-1, andZhuque-2 performed their first successful orbital launch, whileSpaceX's Starship – the world's largest rocket – launched two times during its development stage:IFT-1 andIFT-2.

In terms of national-level scientific space missions,ISRO successfully soft-landedChandrayaan-3 on theMoon,Roscosmos'sLuna 25 failed to land on the Moon,NASA'sOSIRIS-REx returned an asteroid sample from101955 Bennu back to Earth and NASA'sLucy probe performed a flyby of asteroid152830 Dinkinesh. This year also saw the launch ofESA'sJupiter Icy Moons Explorer probe,JAXA'sXRISM space telescope, JAXA'sSLIM lunar lander, and NASA'sPsyche asteroid probe.

Two crewed space stations, theInternational Space Station (ISS) andTiangong, were in operation in 2023. In terms of crewed missions, the ISS sawExpedition 68,69, and70, while Tiangong sawShenzhou 15,16, and17. The ISS also briefly hosted crews ofAxiom Mission 2, a private spaceflight mission. Notably, becauseSoyuz MS-22 was afflicted by a coolant leak,Soyuz MS-23 was launched as a replacement crew return vehicle.

This year also saw the first time citizens ofAntigua and Barbuda andPakistan crossed the 50 mi (80 km) altitude mark, which is the United States's definition of outer space. They did so in a suborbital launch organized byVirgin Galactic, however, they did not managed to cross theKármán line (100 km or 62 mi).Albania,Djibouti,Ireland,Oman andVatican City (on behalf ofItaly) have their own satellite in orbit for the first time in 2023.

Overview

[edit]

Astronomy and Astrophysics

[edit]

European Space Agency's (ESA)Euclid satellite was launched towards Sun-Earth L2 point by a Falcon 9 rocket on July 1. The satellite observes distant galaxies to studydark matter anddark energy.

ISRO launchedAditya-L1 to study the Sun on September 2.

JAXA launchedXRISM (X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission) X-ray space telescope andSLIM lunar lander on September 6.

Exploration of the Solar System

[edit]

On 14 April, ESA launched theJupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) spacecraft to exploreJupiter and its large ice-covered moons following an eight-year transit.[1]

TheOSIRIS-REx mission returned to Earth on 24 September with samples collected from asteroidBennu.[2]

NASA launched thePsyche spacecraft on 13 October 2023, an orbiter mission that will explore the origin ofplanetary cores by studying the metallic asteroid16 Psyche, on aFalcon Heavy launch vehicle.

On November 1, NASA'sLucy probe performed a flyby of asteroid152830 Dinkinesh, revealing it to be a binary pair.[3][4]

Lunar exploration

[edit]

ISRO launched its third lunar missionChandrayaan-3 on 14 July 2023 at 9:05 UTC;[5] it consisted of lander, rover and a propulsion module,[6] and successfully landed in the south pole region of the Moon on 23 August 2023. For technology demonstration experiments, hop experiment on the Vikram Lander was conducted and the Propulsion Module (PM) of Chandrayaan-3 was moved from an orbit around Moon to an orbit around Earth, where it operated until 22 August 2024.[7][8]

Russian lunar landerLuna 25 was launched on 10 August 2023, 23:10 UTC, atop aSoyuz-2.1b rocket from theVostochny Cosmodrome.[9] It is the first Russian attempt to land a spacecraft on the Moon since the Soviet landerLuna 24 in 1974. It crashed on the Moon on 19 August after technical glitches.

JAXA launchedSLIM (Smart Lander for Investigating Moon) lunar lander (carrying two mini rovers) and a space telescope (XRISM) on 6 September. SLIM entered orbit around the Moon on 25 December (UTC).

Human spaceflight

[edit]

A new record for the number of people in space at the same time, though not necessarily all in orbit, was reached on 25 May 2023. 20 people were in space simultaneously, with eleven people aboard theISS, three onTiangong, and six onVSSUnity.[10] Five days later on 30 May, the record for the number of people in orbit simultaneously was broken as well, with 17 people in orbit at once; 6 people on Tiangong fromShenzhou 15 and16, 7 people fromExpedition 69 on the ISS as well 4 crew members fromAxiom-2 also on the ISS.[11][10]

Private Human Spaceflight and Tourism

[edit]

Axiom Mission 2 private crew mission to the International Space Station was launched on 21 May 2023 on a SpaceX Falcon 9. The mission ended with the successful return of the crew to Earth on 31 May 2023.

Virgin GalacticUnity 25 mission took place 25 May 2023. This was the first mission for Virgin Galactic's suborbital spaceplaneVSSUnity since 2021. On 29 June 2023,Virgin Galactic flew their first commercial suborbital spaceflight mission,Galactic 01, with their suborbital spaceplane VSSUnity. OnboardUnity were three employees of the company and three passengers (whose flight had been paid from outside the company) from theItalian Air Force andItaly's National Research Council.[12] On 10 AugustVirgin Galactic flew theirGalactic 02 mission, the firstVSSUnity flight carrying a space tourist.Galactic 03 mission flew on 8 September, followed byGalactic 04 on 6 October andGalactic 05 on 2 November 2023. All of these crewed suborbital missions were flown byUnity.

Rocket innovation

[edit]

On 10 January,ABL Space Systems'RS1 had its debut flight, but failed to reach orbit.[13]

On 10 February,SSLV rocket developed byISRO had its first successful orbital launch.

On 4 March,IRGC'sQaem 100 performed its orbital maiden flight following a successful suborbital test flight in 2022. However the vehicle, which was carrying theNahid-1 satellite, failed to put the payload in orbit.[14][15]

On 7 March,JAXA/MHIH3's maiden flight was terminated in-flight due to failure to ignite the second stage, resulting in the loss of theALOS-3 land observation satellite.[16]

On 23 March,Relativity Space'sTerran 1 had its debut flight. The flight goal, which was to demonstrate the viability of 3D printing for major structural components of a rocket, was achieved when Terran 1 passedmaxq and continued to perform nominally. However, after stage separation, the second stage failed to ignite, ending the mission.[17] Following the failed launch, Relativity retired the rocket in favor of developing the much larger, reusableTerran R vehicle.[18]

On 2 April,Space Pioneer'sTianlong-2 had its debut flight, and successfully reached orbit. It was the first successful launch of a Chinese privately-funded liquid-fueled rocket. Space Pioneer is the first private company to reach orbit on its first attempt using a fully liquid fueled rocket.[19]

On 20 April,SpaceX'sStarship had itsfirst test flight,[20] aiming to complete about three-quarters of an orbit and landing in the Pacific Ocean northwest ofKauai.[21] Several engines on the booster failed during the flight and the flight termination system was triggered, ending the flight before stage separation.

On 22 April,Evolution Space completed its first suborbital space flight test with the Gold Chain Cowboy solid-fueled rocket.[22]

On 30 May, theNorth KoreanChollima-1 made its first orbital launch attempt, carrying the military reconnaissance satelliteMalligyong-1.[23] However, the launch failed to achieve orbit when the second stage ignited too early in the mission.[24] The launch vehicle crashed into theYellow Sea.[25]

On 12 July,LandSpace'sZhuque-2 rocket, in its second flight, became the world's first methane-fuelled rocket to successfully reach orbit.[26]

On 5 September, the sea-launched version of theCeres-1 launch vehicle, designated Ceres-1S, made its successful debut.

On 15 September, Firefly's Alpha rocket made its successful flight for a tactically responsive mission for the U.S. Space Force.[27]

On November 18, 2023, SpaceX Starship attempted itssecond flight test, becoming the heaviest rocket to enter space, although the first stage exploded shortly after separation, while the second stage was lost nearly eight minutes after launch. In the same month, they completed the construction of crew access tower atCCSFSSLC-40 launch pad, where they completed 50 launches alone on that launch pad. They also completed 250th Falcon booster landing.

In December 2023,USA broke the world record of most launches by a nation (108), held bySoviet Union in1982.[28][29] In the same month, they completed 200th successful Falcon boosterautonomous spaceport droneship landing.

Satellite technology

[edit]

On January 27,ESA reported the successful demonstration of a braking sail-based satellite deorbiter,ADEO, which could be used byspace debris mitigation measures.[30][31]

In April, Chinese media first reported on tests offlexibleorganic solar cells onballoons in the 35 kmstratosphere.[32][33]

On 29 July aFalcon Heavy rocket launched the Jupiter-3 (EchoStar-24)[34]communications satellite togeosynchronous orbit. With a mass of over 9 tonnes,EchoStar's Jupiter-3 is the heaviest geostationary satellite ever launched.[35]

On 1 June,Caltech reported the first successful demonstration ofsolar energy from space via its SSPD-1 spacecraft.[36][37]

Orbital launches

[edit]
Main articles:List of spaceflight launches in January–June 2023 andList of spaceflight launches in July–December 2023
List of orbital launches
MonthNum. of successesNum. of failuresNum. of partial failures
January1420
February1200
March2230
April1110
May1910
June1300
July1800
August2110
September2120
October1700
November1510
December2801
Total211111

Deep-space rendezvous

[edit]
Date (UTC)SpacecraftEventRemarks
17 MarchParker Solar Probe15thperihelionSuccess
21 MarchHakuto-R Mission 1Lunar orbit insertionSuccess[38]
25 AprilHakuto-R Mission 1Lunar landingCommunications were lost, landing failed.[39]
19 JuneBepiColomboThirdgravity assist at MercurySuccess
22 JuneParker Solar Probe16thperihelionSuccess
31 JulyJuno53rd perijoveOn this perijoveJuno flew byIo at a distance of 22,000 km.[40]
5 AugustChandrayaan-3Lunar orbit insertionSuccess[41]
16 AugustLuna 25Lunar orbit insertionSuccess[42]
19 AugustLuna 25Lunar landingCommunications were lost, crashed onto the Moon's surface.[43]
21 AugustParker Solar ProbeSixth gravity assist atVenusSuccess
23 AugustChandrayaan-3Lunar landingSuccess[44]
24 SeptemberOSIRIS-RExSample return to Earth and gravity assist at EarthSuccess[45]
27 SeptemberParker Solar Probe18thperihelionSuccess
4 OctoberSLIMFlyby of theMoonPart of the spacecraft's approach to lunar orbit via aWeak stability boundary like trajectory
Between 13 October and 10 NovemberChandrayaan-34 Lunar flybys on Earth returnSuccess[7]
1 NovemberLucyFlyby of152830 DinkineshThe spacecraft flew by the asteroid at a distance of 425 km.[46]
25 DecemberSLIMLunar orbit insertionSuccess[47]
29 DecemberParker Solar Probe18thperihelionSuccess
30 DecemberJuno57th perijoveOn the day of this perijove,Juno flew byIo at a distance of 1,500 km. Orbital period around Jupiter reduced to 35 days.[48][49]

Extravehicular activities (EVAs)

[edit]
See also:List of spacewalks 2015–2024
Start date/timeDurationEnd timeSpacecraftCrewRemarks
20 January 2023
13:14
7 hours 21 minutes20:35Expedition 68
ISSQuest
JapanKoichi Wakata
United StatesNicole Mann
First spacewalk of 2023 to finish installation of the IROSA mounting brackets on the starboard side of the station. Wakata and Mann installed cables on the 1B Array at the S6 truss, which was not completed on the last spacewalk, tightened bolts and installed a terminator on a cable along with its connected jumper on the SSDCDC converter box to isolate the 1B array until the IROSA solar arrays are installed following the arrival ofSpaceX CRS-28 in June. They also assembled and installed the IROSA mounting bracket onto the 1A array, which was also left incomplete on the last spacewalk. Wakata and Mann were unable to secure the final strut on the 1A solar array because of debris in the guide track of the mounting pad and only one of the jumpers was installed. The astronauts returned the strut to the Quest Airlock and will use special tools to clean the tracks before it is remounted on the next spacewalk. They were also unable to connect the cables for 1A due to time constraints. NASA astronautZena Cardman was Ground IV, assisted byJAXA astronautAkihiko Hoshide, who was the Capcom for the astronauts inside the ISS during the spacewalk.[50][51][52]
2 February 2023
12:45
6 hours 41 minutes19:26Expedition 68
ISSQuest
United StatesNicole Mann
JapanKoichi Wakata
Final spacewalk to install the mounting brackets for the 1A solar array in preparation for the delivery of IROSA onSpaceX CRS-28. Tasks included installing the final strut, securing the bolts on the 1A solar array, relocating foot restraints that were left on P6 inboard, and routing cables. NASA astronautZena Cardman was Ground IV.[53][54]
9 February 2023
9:10
7 hours 6 minutes16:16Shenzhou 15
TSSWentian airlock
ChinaFei Junlong
ChinaZhang Lu
They completed a series of tasks, including installing the fourth external pump (Z01-04) on the Mengtian lab module and other tasks related to Mengtian's payload airlock, which allows astronauts to deploy science payloads and small satellites using the station's robotic arms. After successfully completing the installation and commissioning of the extended pump set in the Mengtian experimental cabin, Fei Junlong needs to transfer to the core cabin of Tianhe, remove the foot stopper in the tool box outside the node, and then return to the Mengtian experimental cabin, and install it in the designated location for the second time out of the cabin to install large equipment. For the first time, Fei Junlong held a large-scale foot stopper and an external operating platform to carry out a large-scale transfer, which put forward higher requirements for the safety of the task.[55] It is China's longest spacewalk to date.[56]
2 March 2023
??:??
? hours ? minutes??:??Shenzhou 15

TSSWentian airlock

ChinaFei Junlong
ChinaZhang Lu
Fei Junlong and Zhang Lu went out of the cabin again to perform tasks such as the installation of external equipment on the space station. After leaving the cabin, Fei Junlong and Zhang Lu first autonomously transferred to the operating point with the help of the handrail outside the cabin. During the crawling process, Fei Junlong had to take off the two safety rope hooks of the previous handrail and hang them on the next handrail every time he moved a handrail. Repeatedly picking and hanging the hooks was a small challenge and not good for the strength of the astronaut's upper limbs.

The equipment that Fei Junlong and Zhang Lu are going to install for the second time out of the cabin has about 20 plugs, and these plugs have protective covers.[55] When installing, you need to pull out the protective covers before inserting the plugs. Do a power test. Other tasks were to dump trash bags during spacewalk.[57]

30 March 2023
??:??
? hours ? minutes??:??Shenzhou 15

TSSWentian airlock

ChinaFei Junlong
ChinaZhang Lu
Fei Junlong and Zhang Lu partnered again to perform the third out-of-cabin activity and complete the task of installing and connecting cables across the cabin. There are more than 40 plugs at both ends of the cross-cabin cable, and the work intensity and difficulty are greater than last time.

Fei Junlong and Zhang Lu successfully completed this mission in a way that they had not trained before.[55] Other tasks were to dump trash bags during spacewalk.[57]

15 April 2023
??:??
? hours ? minutes??:??Shenzhou 15

TSSWentian airlock

ChinaFei Junlong
ChinaZhang Lu
During the fourth spacewalk, the three astronauts of the Shenzhou 15 crew worked closely together inside and outside the cabin, and successfully completed the installation of the fifth extended pump (Z02-01) set outside the Mengtian, the installation and connection of cross-cabin cables, and the external load exposure platform. The installation of support rods and other tasks laid the foundation for the subsequent large-scale extravehicular science and technology experiments. Other tasks were to dump trash bags during spacewalk.[57]
19 April
01:40
7 hours 55 minutes09:35Expedition 69

ISSPoisk

RussiaSergey Prokopyev
RussiaDmitry Petelin
Ninth in a series of spacewalks to outfitNauka and to prepareERA for operations. The spacewalkers usedERA to pick up the radiator with the arm where it was relocated at the end of the spacewalk. They closed valves on the nitrogen jumpers, removed covers over the nitrogen jumpers, disconnected the radiator heater cable and capped it, removed bolts and launch restraints, and transferred the radiator over toNauka and installed it into a socket on the forward face where it will be deployed at the end of EVA 4. As part of get-ahead tasks, they will prepare the airlock for transfer toNauka on the next spacewalk and stowed theERA adapter on the airlock. Because of time and issues with matting the radiator the task to jettison the covers was moved to the next spacewalk. This was the longest spacewalk of this expedition and a critical one to get the lab activated.[58]
28 April
13:11
7 hours 1 minute20:12Expedition 68
ISSQuest
United StatesStephen Bowen
United Arab EmiratesSultan Al Neyadi
Bowen and Al Neyadi, who became the first Arab astronaut to perform a spacewalk, finished routing cables and secured the struts with MLI at the 1B and 1A solar arrays in preparation for the arrival of the IROSA arrays in June. The primary task to retrieve the Space to Ground Antenna (SASA) was deferred to the next spacewalk because a stuck bolt on the electronics box prevented the antenna from being released from the FRAM. NASA AstronautAnne McClain was Ground IV CAPCOM.[59][60][61]
4 May
20:00
7 hours 11 minutes03:11Expedition 69

ISSPoisk

RussiaSergey Prokopyev
RussiaDmitry Petelin
Tenth in a series of spacewalks to outfitNauka and to prepareERA for operations. The spacewalkers removed bolts, removed covers, disconnected cables, and usedERA to transfer the airlock over toNauka where it was installed on the forward facing port. Once the airlock was installed they mated cables and jettisoned their trash which included hardware and covers from the previous spacewalks and this spacewalk. Spacewalk faced a delay whenERA entered an uncontrolled roll placing the airlock out of alignment. Prokopyev and Petelin improvised with a little elbow grease and got the airlock rotated into the correct position and got it latched in place. Spacewalk faced another delay when tape was found on the electrical connectors requiring Prokopyev to cut it before the cables were connected.[62][63][64][65]
12 May
15:47
5 hours 14 minutes23:01Expedition 69

ISSPoisk

RussiaSergey Prokopyev
RussiaDmitry Petelin
Eleventh and final spacewalk to outfitNauka and to prepareERA for operations. To wrap up work onNauka, the cosmonauts deployed the radiator, and installed nitrogen and ammonia jumpers to cool the Russian Segment and connected the radiator to electrical power, hydraulics, and mechanical connections. As a getahead task while the radiator was being filled with coolant the cosmonauts installed gap spanners onERA's boom to allow for translation on future spacewalks.[66][67]
9 June
13:15
6 hours 3 minutes19:18Expedition 69
ISSQuest
United StatesStephen Bowen
United StatesWoody Hoburg
NASA astronauts Steve Bowen and Woody Hoburg exited the station's Quest airlock and installed an upgraded IROSA (International Space Station Roll-Out Solar Array) on the 1A power channel on the starboard truss of the station. Task included removing bolts, deploying the rollers, and installing cables before the solar array was picked up by Hoburg with assistance from Canadarm 2 and installed on the 1A solar array on the S4 Truss. The array was deployed at 16:32 hours and is receiving power.[68][69]
15 June
12:42
5 hours 35 minutes18:17Expedition 69
ISSQuest
United StatesStephen Bowen
United StatesWoody Hoburg
NASA astronauts Steve Bowen and Woody Hoburg exited the station's Quest airlock to install the final upgraded IROSA (International Space Station Roll-Out Solar Array) on the 1B power channel on the starboard truss of the station. Task included removing bolts, deploying the rollers, and installing cables before the solar array was picked up by Hoburg with assistance from Canadarm 2 and installed on the 1B solar array on the S6 Truss. The array was deployed at 16:51 hours and is receiving power. As part of getahead task they covered the cables in MLI and secured the struts, relocated their foot restraints inboard, and stowed the support beams on the flight support structure for disposal.[70][71]
22 June
14:24
6 hours 24 minutes20:48Expedition 69

ISSPoisk

RussiaSergey Prokopyev
RussiaDmitry Petelin
Prokopyev and Petelin exited thePoisk airlock and routed anEthernet cable to the port experiment frame on theZvezda Service Module, jettisoned experiment hardware including theTMTC Monoblock antennas, the highspeed data transmission antenna, and theSeismo Prognos payload, installed a data transmission radio onto the port frame, removed experiments from theZvezda Service Module, photographed Zvezda including the thrusters so they can patch the leak, inspected an antenna, and retrieved theBiorisk containers. As a getahead they cleaned the windows on the Russian segment, reposition the Plume Measurement Unit, and jettisoned a towel.[72][73]
20 July 2023
05:45
7 hours 55 minutes13:40Shenzhou 16
TSSWentian airlock
ChinaJing Haipeng
ChinaZhu Yangzhu
They installed & lifted the bracket for panoramic camera B of core module, unlocked & lifted panoramic camera A/B of Mengtian lab module. Zhu Yangzhu became first Chinese flight engineer to conduct an extravehicular activity.[74]
9 August
14:44
6 hours 35 minutes21:19Expedition 69

ISSPoisk

RussiaSergey Prokopyev
RussiaDmitry Petelin
Twelfth and final spacewalk to outfitNauka and to prepareERA for operations. Both cosmonauts ventured outside the station'sPoiskAirlock to attach three debris shields to theRassvet module. They also tested the sturdiness of the last MLM outfitting called theERA portable workpost, that will be affixed to the end of the European robotic arm attached to the Nauka multipurpose laboratory module.[75][76][77]
25 October
17:49
7 hours 41 minutes01:30 (next day)Expedition 70

ISSPoisk

RussiaOleg Kononenko
RussiaNikolai Chub
The cosmonauts ventured outside and installed a mini radar experiment onNauka, launched aCubeSat which will test solar sails, and photographed the RTOd radiator and closed valves to isolate the radiator and vented residual coolant so plans can be done to fix a leaking cooling line that delayed two US spacewalks. During one of the vents, Kononenko got sprayed and the coolant got on one of his tethers. The tether was placed in a trash bag and stowed externally to decontaminate it, while Kononenko's suit was wiped down to prevent coolant from entering the station. During the radar deployment, one of the hinges got stuck. The cosmonauts will go out on the next spacewalk with a pole and lock the hinges so it can be deployed. During the satellite deployment, the telescoping booms did not come out and ground controllers are working to manually deploy them so the satellite can track the sun.[78][79][80]
1 November 2023
12:05
6 hours 42 minutes18:47Expedition 70
ISSQuest
United StatesJasmin Moghbeli
United StatesLoral O'Hara
Moghbeli and O'Hara ventured outside and removed an H fixture from the 3B mass canister on the P4 truss in preparation for the arrival of the struts and theIROSA solar arrays in 2025. They also replaced a damaged Trundle Bearing under Cover 2 which had been giving them trouble in the past and greased the tracks before the new Trundle Bearing was installed on the portSARJ, secured a cable on Camera 8 which was shorting out a light used for dockings, and released wedge clamps on the SASA antenna. The primary task to retrieve the SASA antenna from ESP2 so it can be returned to Earth onSpaceX CRS-29 was moved to the next spacewalk because of issues removing the covers from the SARJ. O'Hara was not secured properly during the removal and had to be assisted by Moghbeli to get the cover stowed. During the spacewalk, the bag containing the grease gun was lost, but the tools were not needed and the bag posed no collision risk to the station. This was the fourth all-female spacewalk on the station, following Christina Koch and Jessica Meir's three spacewalks during Expedition 61.[81][82][83]
21 December 2023
6:10
7 hours 25 minutes13:35Shenzhou 17
TSSWentian airlock
ChinaTang Hongbo
ChinaTang Shengjie
Tasks included a repair test of theTianhe core module's solar panels, which have sustained minor damage caused by impacts ofspace debris andmicrometeoroids.[84]

Space debris events

[edit]
See also:List of space debris producing events
Date/Time (UTC)Source objectEvent typePieces trackedRemarks
4 JanuaryRussiaKosmos 2499Breakup85Energetic fragmentation event; Cause Unknown
11 MarchUnited StatesOrbcomm F36Breakup7Unknown; likely energetic fragmentation event caused by a malfunction in the hydrazine orbit adjust system[85][86]
29 JuneSoviet Union Kosmos 2143 (Strela-3)Breakup6Unknown; likely energetic fragmentation caused by battery overpressure. Six fragments alongside the primary vehicle.[87]
21 AugustItaly Vega VV02 VESPA adapterBreakup7Unknown; likely debris impact[88][89]

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 of origin of the rocket, not to the launch services provider or the spaceport. As an example,Electron launches from Mahia in New Zealand are counted under USA.

CountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial
failures
 China676610
 France2200
 India7700
 Iran2110
 Israel1100
 Italy1100
 Japan3210
 North Korea3120
 Russia191900
 South Korea2200
 United States116[b]10961
World223211111

By rocket

[edit]
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100

By family

[edit]
FamilyCountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Alpha United States2101
Antares United States1100
Ariane France2200
Atlas United States2200
Ceres China7610
Chŏllima North Korea3120Maiden flight
Delta United States1100
Electron United States9810
Falcon United States969600
GSLV India1100
H-series Japan3210
Hyperbola China2200
Jielong China1100
Kinetika China1100
Kuaizhou China6600
LauncherOne United States1010Final flight
Long March China474700
LVM 3 India2200
Nuri South Korea1100
PSLV India3300
Qaem Iran1010Maiden flight
RS1 United States1010Maiden flight
R-7 Russia171700
Safir Iran1100
Shavit Israel1100
SK solid fueled LV South Korea1100Maiden flight
SSLV India1100
Starship United States2020Maiden flight
Terran United States1010Maiden flight
Tianlong China1100Maiden flight
UR Russia2200
Vega Italy1100
Zhuque China2200

By type

[edit]
RocketCountryFamilyLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Alpha United StatesAlpha2101
Antares United StatesAntares1100
Ariane 5 FranceAriane2200Final flight
Atlas V United StatesAtlas2200
Ceres-1 ChinaCeres7610
Chŏllima 1 North KoreaChŏllima3120Maiden flight
Delta IV United StatesDelta1100
Electron United StatesElectron9810
Falcon 9 United StatesFalcon969600
GSLV IndiaGSLV1100
H-IIA JapanH-series2200
H3 JapanH-series1010Maiden flight
Hyperbola-1 ChinaHyperbola2200
Jielong 3 ChinaJielong1100
Kinetika 1 ChinaKinetika1100
Kuaizhou-1 ChinaKuaizhou6600
LauncherOne United StatesLauncherOne1010Final flight
Long March 2 ChinaLong March252500
Long March 3 ChinaLong March6600
Long March 4 ChinaLong March7700
Long March 5 ChinaLong March1100
Long March 6 ChinaLong March3300
Long March 7 ChinaLong March3300
Long March 11 ChinaLong March2200
LVM 3 IndiaLVM 32200
Nuri South KoreaNuri1100
PSLV IndiaPSLV3300
Proton RussiaUR2200
Qaem 100 IranQaem1010Maiden flight
Qased IranSafir1100
RS1 United StatesRS11010Maiden flight
Shavit 2 IsraelShavit1100
SSLV IndiaSSLV1100
SK solid fueled TV South KoreaSK solid fueled LV1100Maiden flight
Soyuz-2 RussiaR-7171700
Starship United StatesStarship2020Maiden flight
Terran 1 United StatesTerran1010Only flight
Tianlong-2 ChinaTianlong1100Maiden flight
Vega ItalyVega1100
Zhuque-2 ChinaZhuque2200

By configuration

[edit]
RocketCountryTypeLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Alpha United StatesAlpha2101
Antares 230+ United StatesAntares1100Final flight
Ariane 5 ECA FranceAriane 52200Final flight
Atlas V 501 United StatesAtlas V1100Final flight
Atlas V 551 United StatesAtlas V1100
Ceres-1 ChinaCeres-16510
Ceres-1S ChinaCeres-11100Maiden flight
Chŏllima 1 North KoreaChŏllima 13120Maiden flight
Delta IV Heavy United StatesDelta IV1100
Electron United StatesElectron9810
Falcon 9 Block 5 United StatesFalcon 9919100
Falcon Heavy United StatesFalcon 95500
GSLV Mk II IndiaGSLV1100
H-IIA 202 JapanH-IIA2200
H3-22S JapanH31010Maiden flight
Hyperbola-1 ChinaHyperbola-12200
Jielong 3 ChinaJielong 31100
Kinetika 1 ChinaKinetika 11100
Kuaizhou-1A ChinaKuaizhou-16600
LauncherOne United StatesLauncherOne1010Final flight
Long March 2C ChinaLong March 26600
Long March 2C /YZ-1S ChinaLong March 23300
Long March 2D ChinaLong March 2121200
Long March 2D /YZ-3 ChinaLong March 21100Maiden flight
Long March 2F/G ChinaLong March 22200
Long March 2F/T ChinaLong March 21100
Long March 3B/E ChinaLong March 35500
Long March 3B/E /YZ-1 ChinaLong March 31100
Long March 4B ChinaLong March 41100
Long March 4C ChinaLong March 46600
Long March 5 ChinaLong March 51100
Long March 6 ChinaLong March 61100
Long March 6A ChinaLong March 62200
Long March 7 ChinaLong March 71100
Long March 7A ChinaLong March 72200
Long March 11 ChinaLong March 112200
LVM 3 IndiaLVM 32200
Nuri South KoreaNuri1100
PSLV-CA IndiaPSLV2200
PSLV-XL IndiaPSLV1100
Proton-M /DM-03 RussiaProton1100
Proton-M /Briz-M RussiaProton1100
Qaem 100 IranQaem 1001010Maiden flight
Qased IranQased1100
RS1 United StatesRS11010Maiden flight
Shavit 2 IsraelShavit 21100
SSLV IndiaSSLV1100
SK solid fueled TV2 South KoreaSK solid fueled TV1100Maiden flight
Soyuz-2.1a RussiaSoyuz-28800
Soyuz-2.1a /Fregat-M RussiaSoyuz-21100
Soyuz-2.1b RussiaSoyuz-22200
Soyuz-2.1b /Fregat-M RussiaSoyuz-24400
Soyuz-2-1v RussiaSoyuz-22200
Starship Block 1 United StatesStarship2020Maiden flight
Terran 1 United StatesTerran 11010Only flight
Tianlong-2 ChinaTianlong-21100Maiden flight
Vega ItalyVega1100
Zhuque-2 ChinaZhuque-22200Final flight

By spaceport

[edit]
25
50
75
100
125
150
China
France
India
Iran
Israel
Japan
Kazakhstan
New Zealand
North Korea
Russia
South Korea
United Kingdom
United States
SiteCountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Baikonur Kazakhstan9900
Cape Canaveral United States595810
Cornwall United Kingdom1010First launch
Jeju[90] South Korea1100First launch
Jiuquan China363510
Kennedy United States131300
Kourou France3300
Mahia New Zealand7610
MARS United States3300
Naro South Korea1100
PSCA United States1010
Palmachim Israel1100
Plesetsk Russia7700
Satish Dhawan India7700
Shahroud Iran2110
Sohae North Korea3120
South China Sea China2200
Starbase United States2020First orbital launch
Taiyuan China9900
Tanegashima Japan3210
Vandenberg United States302901
Vostochny Russia3300
Wenchang China4400
Xichang China151500
Yellow Sea China1100
Total223211111

By orbit

[edit]
50
100
150
200
  •   Low Earth
  •   Low Earth (ISS)
  •   Low Earth (CSS)
  •   Low Earth (SSO)
  •   Low Earth (retrograde)
  •   Medium Earth
  •   Molniya
  •   Geosynchronous
  •   Tundra
  •   Lunar transfer
  •   High Earth Orbit
  •   Heliocentric
  •  
Orbital regimeLaunchesAchievedNot achievedAccidentally
achieved
Remarks
Transatmospheric2020
Low Earth /Sun-synchronous18517690Including flights toISS andTiangong (CSS)
Geosynchronous /Tundra /GTO252500
Medium Earth /Molniya6600
High Earth /Lunar transfer2200
Heliocentric orbit /Planetary transfer3300
Total223212110

Suborbital launch statistics

[edit]

By country

[edit]

For the purposes of this section, the yearly tally of suborbital launches by country assigns each flight to the country of origin of the rocket, not to the launch services provider or the spaceport. Flights intended to fly below 80 km (50 mi) are omitted.

CountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial
failures
 Brazil3300
 Canada7610
 China2200
 France2200
 Germany1010
 Iran2200
 Israel1100
 Japan1100
 North Korea7700
 Pakistan3210
 Russia5410
 South Korea1100
 Turkey1100
 United States393540
 Yemen1100
World766880

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Clockwise from top:
    • Starship, the most powerful rocket ever built, launched for the first and second time in 2023
    • Lucy flew past asteroidDinkinesh, revealing its contact-binary moonSelam
    • Chandrayaan 3 landed on the lunar surface in August 2023, makingIndia the fourth country to successfully do so
    • OSIRIS-REx returned samples from101955 Bennu to Earth, completing a seven-year roundtrip journey
  2. ^IncludesElectron launches from Mahia. Broke world record of most launches by a nation (108) held bySoviet Union in1982.[28][29]

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External links

[edit]
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Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
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