On Oct. 4, 2007, the Space Age celebrates the 50th anniversary of the
historic launch of Sputnik, the first artificial
satellite, by the former Soviet Union.
The space
shot also launched the Space Race to the moon between the U.S. and Soviet Union. But despite that turbulent beginning, the initial launch has led to five
decades of triumphs and tragedies in space science and
exploration.
Below is a
timeline by Space News and SPACE.com chronicling the last 50 years of
spaceflight. You are invited to walk through the last half century of space exploration and click related links for more in depth information:
Sometime in the 11th Century: China combines sulfur, charcoal and
saltpeter (potassium nitrate) to make gunpowder, the first fuel used to propel early
rockets in Chinese warfare.
July 4,
1054: Chinese
astronomers observe the supernova in Taurus that formed
the Crab Nebula. ZOOM
IN to the Crab Nebula. VIDEO
Mid
1700s: Hyder Ali,
the Sultan of Mysome in India, begins manufacturing rockets sheathed in iron,
not cardboard or paper, to improve their range and stability.
March
16, 1926: Robert
Goddard launches the first
successful liquid-fueled rocket.
July 17, 1929: Robert Goddard, sometimes referred
to as the "Father of Modern Rocketry," launches a rocket that carries with it
the first set of scientific tools — a barometer and a camera — in Auburn, Mass.
The launch was Goddard's fourth.
Feb. 18, 1930: The dwarf
planet Pluto is discovered by American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh
at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz.
Oct. 3,
1942: Germany
successfully test launches the first ballistic missile, the A4, more commonly
known as the V-2, and later uses it near the end of European combat in World
War II.
Sep. 29,
1945: Werner von
Braun arrives at Ft. Bliss, Texas, with six other German rocket
specialists.
Oct. 14,
1947: American test
pilot Chuck Yeager breaks the
sound barrier for the first time in the X-1,
also known as Glamorous Glennis. IMAGE
GALLERY
Oct. 4,
1957: A modified
R-7 two-stage ICBM launches
the satellite Sputnik 1 from Tyuratam. The Space Race
between the Soviet Union and the United States begins.
Nov. 3, 1957: The Soviet Union launches Sputnik 2
with the first
living passenger, the dog Laika, aboard.
Dec. 6,
1957: A Vanguard
TV-3 carrying a grapefruit-sized satellite explodes
at launch; a failed response to the Sputnik launch by the United States.
Jan. 31,
1958: Explorer
1, the first satellite with an onboard telemetry system, is launched by the
United States into orbit aboard a Juno rocket and returns data from space. IMAGE
GALLERY
Oct. 7,
1958: NASA Administrator
T. Keith Glennan publicly announces NASA's manned spaceflight program along
with the formation of the Space Task Group, a panel of scientist and engineers
from space-policy organizations absorbed by NASA. The announcement came just
six days after NASA was founded.
Jan. 2,
1959: The U.S.S.R. launches Luna 1,
which misses the Moon but becomes the first artificial object to leave Earth
orbit.
Jan. 12,
1959: NASA awards
McDonnell Corp. the contract to manufacture the Mercury capsules.
Feb. 28, 1959: NASA launches Discover 1, the U.S.
first spy satellite, but it is not until the Aug. 11, 1960, launch of Discover
13 that film is recovered successfully.
May 28,
1959: The United States launches the first
primates in space, Able and Baker, on a suborbital flight. VIDEO
Aug. 7,
1959: NASA's
Explorer 6 launches and provides the first photographs of the Earth
from space.
Sept.
12, 1959: The Soviet
Union's Luna 2 is launched and two days later is intentionally crashed into
the Moon.
Sept. 17, 1959: NASA's X-15 hypersonic
research plane, capable of speeds to Mach 6.7, makes its first powered
flight.
Oct. 24,
1960: To rush the
launch of a Mars probe before the Nov. 7 anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution,
Field Marshall Mitrofan Nedelin ignored several safety protocols and 126 people
are killed when the R-16 ICBM explodes at the Baikonur Cosmodrome during launch
preparations.
Feb. 12,
1961: The Soviet
Union launches Venera to Venus, but the probe stops responding after a week.
April
12, 1961: Yuri
Gagarin becomes the first man in
space with a 108-minute flight on Vostok
1 in which he completed one orbit. VIDEO
May 5,
1961: Mercury
Freedom 7 launches on a Redstone rocket for a 15-minute suborbital flight,
making Alan Shepard the first
American in space.
May 25, 1961: In a speech before Congress,
President John Kennedy announces that an American will land on the Moon and be
returned safely to Earth before the end of the decade.
Oct. 27,
1961: Saturn 1, the
rocket for the initial
Apollo missions, is tested for the first time.
Feb. 20,
1962: John
Glenn makes the first U.S. manned orbital flight aboard Mercury 6.
June 7,
1962: Werner von
Braun backs the idea of a Lunar Orbit Rendezvous mission.
July 10,
1962: The United States
launches Telstar 1, which enables the trans-Atlantic transmission of
television signals.
June 14,
1962: Agreements
are signed establishing the European Space Research Organisation and the
European Launcher Development Organisation. Both eventually were dissolved.
July 28,
1962: The U.S.S.R
launches its first successful spy satellite, designated Cosmos 7.
Aug. 27, 1962: Mariner
2 launches and eventually performs the first successful interplanetary
flyby when it passes by Venus.
Sept.
29, 1962: Canada's
Alouette 1 launches aboard a NASA Thor-Agena B rocket, becoming the first
satellite from a country other than the United States or Soviet Union.
June 16,
1963: Valentina
Tereshkova becomes the first
woman to fly into space.
July 28,
1964: Ranger 7
launches and is the Ranger series' first success, taking
photographs of the Moon until it crashes into its surface four days later.
April 8,
1964: Gemini 1, a
two-seat spacecraft system, launches in an unmanned flight.
Aug. 19, 1964: NASA's Syncom 3 launches aboard a
Thor-Delta rocket, becoming the first geostationary telecommunications
satellite.
Oct. 12,
1964: The Soviet Union launches
Voskhod 1, a modified Vostok orbiter with a three-person crew.
March
18, 1965: Soviet
cosmonaut Alexei
Leonov makes the first
spacewalk from the Voskhod 2 orbiter.
March
23, 1965: Gemini 3,
the first of the manned Gemini missions, launches with a two-person crew on a
Titan 2 rocket, making astronaut Gus Grissom the first man to travel in space
twice. IMAGE
GALLERY
June 3,
1965: Ed White,
during the Gemini 4 mission, becomes the first
American to walk in space. VIDEO
July 14,
1965: Mariner 4
executes the first successful Mars flyby.
Aug. 21,
1965: Gemini 5
launches on an eight-day mission.
Dec. 15,
1965: Gemini 6
launches and performs a rendezvous with Gemini 7.
Jan. 14,
1966: The Soviet Union's chief designer, Sergei Korolev, dies from complications stemming from
routine surgery, leaving the Soviet space program without its most
influential leader of the preceding 20 years.
Feb. 3,
1966: The unmanned
Soviet spacecraft Luna 9 makes the first soft landing on the Moon.
March 1,
1966: The Soviet Union's Venera 3 probe becomes the first
spacecraft to land on the planet Venus, but its communications
system failed before data could be returned.
March
16, 1966: Gemini 8
launches on a Titan 2 rocket and later docks with a previously launched Agena
rocket — the first docking between two orbiting spacecraft.
April 3,
1966: The Soviet Luna 10
space probe enters lunar orbit, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit the
Moon.
June 2,
1966: Surveyor 1, a
lunar lander, performs the first
successful U.S. soft landing on the Moon.
Jan. 27, 1967: All three astronauts for NASA's
AS-204 Apollo mission suffocate from
smoke inhalation in a cabin fire during a launch pad test.
April 5,
1967: A review
board delivers a damning report to NASA Administrator James Webb about problem
areas in the Apollo spacecraft. The recommended modifications are completed by
Oct. 9, 1968.
April 23, 1967: Soyuz 1 launches but myriad problems
surface. The solar panels do not unfold, there are stability problems and
the parachute fails to open on descent causing the death of Soviet cosmonaut
Vladimir Komarov.
Oct. 11, 1968: Apollo 7, the first manned
Apollo mission, launches on a Saturn 1 for an 11-day mission in Earth
orbit. The mission also featured the first live TV broadcast of humans in
space.
Dec. 21,
1968: Apollo 8
launches on a Saturn V and becomes the first manned
mission to orbit the Moon.
Jan. 16,
1969: Soyuz 4 and Soyuz
5 rendezvous and dock and perform the first in-orbit crew transfer.
March 3,
1969: Apollo 9
launches. During the mission, tests of the lunar module are conducted in Earth
orbit.
May 22,
1969: Apollo 10's
Lunar Module Snoopy comes within 8.6 miles (14 kilometers) of the Moon's
surface.
July 20,
1969: Six years
after U.S. President John F. Kennedy's assassination, the Apollo
11 crew lands on the Moon, fulfilling his promise to put an American there
by the end of the decade and return him safely to Earth. VIDEO:
The First Moon Men
Nov. 26,
1965: France
launches its first satellite, Arterix, on a Diamant A rocket, becoming the 3rd
nation to do so.
Feb. 11,
1970: Japan's
Lambda 4 rocket launches a Japanese test satellite, Ohsumi into orbit.
April 13, 1970: An explosion ruptures the command
module of Apollo 13, days after launch and within reach of the Moon.
Abandoning the mission to save their lives, the astronauts climb into the Lunar
Module and slingshot around the Moon to speed their return back to Earth.
April
24, 1970: The
People's Republic of China launches its first satellite, Dong Fang Hong-1, on a
Long March 1 rocket, becoming the fifth nation capable of launching its own
satellites into space.
Sept. 12: 1970: The Soviet Union launches Luna 16,
the first successful automated lunar sample retrieval mission.
April
19, 1971: A Proton
rocket launches the first
space station, the Salyut
1, from Baikonur.
June 6,
1971: Soyuz 11
launches successfully, docking with Salyut 1. The three
cosmonauts are killed during re-entry from a pressure leak in the cabin.
July 26,
1971: Apollo 15
(the first of the J-class Apollo missions) launches with a Boeing-built Lunar
Roving Vehicle and better life-support equipment to explore the Moon. VIDEO
Oct. 28,
1971: The United
Kingdom successfully launches its Prospero satellite into orbit on a Black
Arrow rocket, becoming the sixth nation capable of launching its own satellites
into space.
Nov. 13,
1971: Mariner 9
becomes the first
spacecraft to orbit Mars and provides the first complete map of the
planet's surface.
Jan. 5,
1972: U.S.
President Richard Nixon announces that NASA is developing a reusable launch
vehicle, the
space shuttle.
March 3,
1972: Pioneer 10,
the first
spacecraft to leave the solar system, launches from Cape Kennedy, Fla.
Dec. 19,
1972: Apollo 17,
the last
mission to the Moon, returns to Earth.
May 14,
1973: A Saturn V
rocket launches Skylab, the United
States' first space station. IMAGE
GALLERY
March
29, 1974: Mariner
10 becomes the first
spacecraft to fly by Mercury.
April
19, 1975: The
Soviet Union launches India's first satellite, Aryabhata.
May 31,
1975: The European
Space Agency is formed.
July 17
1975: Soyuz-19 and Apollo 18 dock.
IMAGE
GALLERY
Aug. 9,
1975: ESA launches
its first satellite, Cos-B, aboard a Thor-Delta rocket.
Sept. 9,
1975: Viking 2,
composed of a lander and an orbiter, launches for Mars.
July 20,
1976: The U.S. Viking
1 lands on Mars, becoming the first successful Mars lander.
Aug. 20,
1977: Voyager
2 is launched on a course toward Uranus and Neptune.
Sept. 5,
1977: Voyager 1 is
launched to perform flybys of Jupiter and Saturn.
Sept. 29, 1977: Salyut
6 reaches orbit. It is the first space station equipped with docking
stations on either end, which allow for two vehicles to dock at once, including
the Progress supply ship.
Feb. 22,
1978: The first GPS
satellite, Navstar 1, launches aboard an Atlas F rocket.
July 11,
1979: Skylab, the
first American space station, crashes
back to Earth in the sparsely populated grasslands of western Australia.
Sept. 1,
1979: Pioneer 11 becomes
the first spacecraft to fly past Saturn.
Dec. 24,
1979: The
French-built Ariane rocket, Europe's
first launch vehicle, launches successfully.
July 18 1980: India launches its Rohini 1
satellite. By using its domestically developed SLV-3 rocket, India becomes the
seventh nation capable of sending objects into space by itself.
April
12, 1981: Space
Shuttle Columbia lifts off from Cape Canaveral, beginning the first space
mission for NASA's new astronaut transportation system.
June 24,
1982: French air
force test pilot Jean-Loup Chretien launches to the Soviet Union's Salyut 7
aboard Soyuz T-6.
Nov. 11,
1982: Shuttle
Columbia launches. During its mission, it deploys two commercial communications
satellites.
June 18,
1983: Sally Ride
aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger becomes the first American
woman in space.
Feb. 7,
1984: Astronauts
Bruce McCandless and Robert Stewart maneuver as many as 328 feet (100 meters)
from the Space Shuttle Challenger using the Manned
Maneuvering Unit, which contains small thrusters, in the first ever
untethered spacewalks.
April 8,
1984: Challenger
crew repairs the Solar Max satellite during a spacewalk.
Sept.
11: 1985: The International
Cometary Explorer, launched by NASA in 1978, performs the first comet flyby.
Jan. 24,
1986: Voyager
2 completes the first and only spacecraft flyby of Uranus.
Jan. 28,
1986: Challenger
explodes 73 seconds after launch, grounding the shuttle fleet for more than
two years.
Feb. 20,
1986: The Soviet Union launches the Mir
space station.
March 13, 1986: A two-cosmonaut crew launches
aboard Soyuz T-15 to power up the Mir space station. During their 18-month
mission, they also revive
the abandoned Salyut 7, and take parts that are later placed aboard Mir.
June 15,
1988: PanAmSat
launches its first satellite, PanAmSat 1, on an Ariane 4 rocket, giving
Intelsat its first taste of competition.
Sept.
19, 1988: Israel
launches its first satellite, the Ofeq 1 reconnaissance probe, aboard an
Israeli Shavit rocket.
Nov. 15,
1988: The Soviet Union launches
its Buran space shuttle on its only flight, an unpiloted
test.
May 4,
1989: The Space Shuttle
Atlantis launches the Magellan space probe
to use radar to map the surface of Venus.
Oct. 18,
1989: Shuttle
Atlantis launches with Jupiter-bound
Galileo space probe on board.
April 7,
1990: China
launches the Asiasat-1 communications satellite, completing its first
commercial contract.
April
25, 1990: The Space
Shuttle Discovery releases the Hubble Space Telescope
into Earth orbit.
Oct. 29,
1991: The U.S.
Galileo spacecraft, on its way to Jupiter, successfully encounters the asteroid
Gaspra, obtaining images and other data during its flyby.
April 23, 1992: The U.S. Cosmic Background Explorer
spacecraft detects the
first evidence of structure in the residual radiation left over from the
Big Bang that created the Universe.
Dec. 28, 1992: Lockheed and Khrunichev Enterprise
announce plans to form Lockheed-Khrunichev-Energia International, a new company
to market
Proton rockets.
June 21,
1993: Shuttle
Endeavour launches carrying Spacehab, a privately owned laboratory that sits in
the shuttle cargo bay.
Dec. 2,
1993: Endeavour launches on a mission to repair the Hubble
Space Telescope.
Dec. 17, 1993: DirecTV launches its first
satellite, DirecTV 1, aboard an Ariane 4 rocket.
Feb. 7, 1994: The first Milstar secure
communications satellite launches. The geosynchronous satellites are used by
battlefield commanders and for strategic communications.
Oct. 15, 1994: India launches its four-stage Polar
Satellite Launch Vehicle for the first time.
Jan. 26, 1995: A Chinese
Long March rocket carrying the Hughes-built Apstar-1 rocket fails. The
accident investigation, along with the probe of a subsequent Long March failure
that destroyed an Intelsat satellite, leads to technology-transfer allegations
that ultimately result in the U.S. government barring launches of
American-built satellites on Chinese rockets.
Feb. 3, 1995: The Space Shuttle Discovery launches
and docks
with the Mir space station.
March 15, 1995: Aerospace giants Lockheed Corp. and
Martin Marietta Corp. merge.
July 13, 1995: Galileo releases its space probe, which is bound for Jupiter and its
moons.
Aug. 7, 1996: NASA and Stanford University researchers announce a paper contending that a 4-billion-year-old martian meteorite,
called
ALH 84001, found in Antarctica in 1984, contains fossilized traces of
carbonate materials that suggest primitive life might once have existed on
Mars. That contention remains controversial.
May 5, 1997: Satellite mobile phone company Iridium
launches its first five satellites on a Delta 2 rocket.
June 25
1997: An unmanned
Russian Progress supply spacecraft collides
with the Mir space station.
July 4,
1997: The Mars
Pathfinder lander and its accompanying Sojourner rover touch down on the
surface of Mars.
Aug. 1, 1997: The Boeing Co. and the McDonnell Douglas Corp.
merge, keeping Boeing's name.
Feb. 14, 1998: Globalstar, a satellite mobile
telephone company, launches its first four satellites on a Delta 2 rocket.
Sept. 9, 1998: A Russian
Zenit 2 rocket launches and subsequently crashes, destroying all 12
Loral-built Globalstar satellites aboard. The payload had an estimated value of
about $180 million.
Nov. 20,
1998: Russia's Zarya control module, the first
segment of the International Space Station, launches
into space and unfurls
its solar arrays.
March
27, 1999: Sea
Launch Co. launches a demonstration satellite, successfully completing
its first launch.
July 23, 1999: The Chandra
X-ray observatory, NASA's flagship mission for X-ray
astronomy, launches
aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia.
Aug. 13, 1999: Iridium files for Chapter 11
bankruptcy, after being unable to pay its creditors. Iridium Satellite LLC
later acquired the original Iridium's assets from bankruptcy.
Nov. 19,
1999: China successfully test launches the unmanned
Shenzhou 1.
July 10, 2000: Europe's largest aerospace company,
European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co., EADS, forms with the consolidation
of DaimlerChrysler Aerospace AG of Munich, Aerospatiale Matra S.A. of Paris,
and Construcciones Aeronáuticas S.A. of Madrid.
March 18, 2001: After launch delays with XM-1, XM
Satellite Radio's XM-2 satellite becomes the company's first satellite in orbit
when it is launched by Sea Launch Co.
March
23, 2001: After
being mothballed in 1999, Mir
descends into the Earth's atmosphere and breaks up over the Pacific Ocean.
May 6,
2001: U.S. entrepreneur Dennis Tito
returns to Earth aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft to become the world's first
paying tourist to visit the International Space Station.
Aug. 29, 2001: Japan's workhorse launch system,
the two-stage
H-2A rocket, launches for the first time.
Feb. 15, 2002: After having trouble selling its
satellite mobile phone service, Globalstar voluntarily files for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection from escalating creditor debt. The company emerged from
bankruptcy Apr. 14, 2004.
Feb. 1, 2003: The Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrates as it re-enters the
Earth's atmosphere, killing the crew. Damage from insulating foam hitting
the orbiter's leading wing on liftoff is later cited as the cause of the
accident.
Aug 22, 2003: The VLS-V03, a Brazilian prototype
rocket, explodes
on the launch pad at Alcântara killing 21 people.
Aug. 25,
2003: NASA launches
the Spitzer
Space Telescope aboard a Delta rocket.
Oct. 1,
2003: Japan's two space agencies, the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science and the National Space
Development Agency of Japan, merge into the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
Oct. 15,
2003: Yang Liwei
becomes China's first taikonaut, having launched aboard Shenzhou 5.
Jan. 4,
2004: The first Mars Exploration Rover, Spirit,
lands on Mars. Its twin, Opportunity lands Jan. 25.
Jan. 14, 2004: President George W. Bush advocates
space exploration missions to the Moon and Mars for NASA in his Vision for Space Exploration
speech.
Sept.
20, 2004: India launches its three-stage Geosynchronous
Satellite Launch Vehicle for the first time.
Oct. 4,
2004: Scaled
Composites' SpaceShipOne
piloted craft wins the X Prize by flying over 100 kilometers above the
Earth twice within two weeks.
July 26, 2005: Discovery becomes the first shuttle to launch since
the Columbia disaster more than two years before. While the crew returned
safely, the loss of several pieces of foam debris prompted further
investigation, which delayed future shuttle missions.
Oct. 12, 2005: A two-taikonaut crew launches
aboard the Chinese Shenzhou 6.
Oct 19, 2005: The last of the Martin
Marietta-built Titan
4 heavy-lift rockets launches.
Jan. 19,
2006: New
Horizons, NASA's first-ever mission to the dwarf planet Pluto and its
moons, launches
atop an Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Flies
past Jupiter one year later in what is billed as NASA's fastest mission to
date.
July 3, 2006: Intelsat acquires fellow fixed
satellite service provider PanAmSat for $6.4 billion.
July 4,
2006: NASA's second
post-Columbia accident test flight, STS-121
aboard Discovery, begins a successful space station-bound mission,
returning the U.S. orbiter fleet to flight status.
Sept.
9., 2006: NASA
resumes construction of the International Space Station with the launch
of the shuttle Atlantis on STS-115 after two successful return to flight
test missions. Atlantis' launch occurs after nearly four years without a
station construction flight.
Oct. 11, 2006: Lockheed Martin completes the sale
of its majority share in International Launch Services to Space Transport Inc.
for $60 million.
Jan. 11,
2007: China downs one of its
weather satellites, Fengyun-1C, with a ground launched missile. In doing
so, China joins Russia and the United States as the only nations to have
successfully tested anti-satellite weapons.
April 6, 2007: The European Commission approves
the acquisition of French-Italian Alcatel Alenia by Paris-based Thales, thus
creating satellite manufacturer Thales Alenia Space.
Aug. 8,
2007: NASA's Space
Shuttle Endeavour launches towards the International Space Station on the STS-118
construction mission. The shuttle crew includes teacher-astronaut
Barbara Morgan, NASA's first educator spaceflyer, who originally served
backup for the first Teacher-in-Space Christa McAuliffe who was lost with six
crewmates during the 1986 Challenger accident.
Sept.
27, 2007: Dawn, the
first ion-powered probe to visit two celestial bodies in one go, launches
on an eight-year mission to the asteroid
Vesta and dwarf planet Ceres, the two largest space rocks in the solar
system.
Oct. 1,
2007: NASA
astronaut Peggy Whitson, the first
female commander of the International Space Station, prepares for an Oct.
10 launch with her Expedition 16 crewmate Yuri Malenchenko and Malaysia's first astronaut Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor. Whitson, and NASA's second
female shuttle commander Pamela Melroy, will command a joint space station
construction mission in late October.
Oct. 4,
2007: The Space Age
turns 50, five decades after the historic
launch of Sputnik 1.