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This is a list of "first" achievements in spaceflight from the first artificial satellite through the Moon landing. It focuses primarily on Space race accomplishments that led to the landing on the Moon. Missions are given in order of launch date.
[edit] Miscellaneous milestones
[edit] Unmanned lunar missions
Milestone |
Date |
Country |
Mission |
First probe to go near the Moon (5995 km), went into heliocentric orbit |
January 1959 |
USSR |
Luna 1 |
First probe to impact the Moon |
September 1959 |
USSR |
Luna 2 |
First probe to photograph the far side of the Moon |
October 1959 |
USSR |
Luna 3 |
First unmanned controlled landing on the Moon, first to transmit from the Moon's surface |
January 1966 |
USSR |
Luna 9 |
First probe to orbit the Moon |
March 1966 |
USSR |
Luna 10 |
First probe to map the Moon |
August 1966 |
USA |
Lunar Orbiter 1 |
[edit] Manned missions
Milestone |
Date |
Country |
Mission |
First man in space, first man to orbit the Earth |
April 1961 |
USSR |
Vostok 1 |
First manual control of a manned spacecraft |
May 1961 |
USA |
Freedom 7 |
First one-day flight |
August 1961 |
USSR |
Vostok 2 |
Two spacecraft launched into nearly intersecting orbits.
Misleadingly claimed by USSR as first rendezvous.[3] [4] [5] |
August 1962 |
USSR |
Vostok 3 and Vostok 4 |
First flight over three days long |
August 1962 |
USSR |
Vostok 3 |
First woman in space |
June 1963 |
USSR |
Vostok 6 |
First crew of three astronauts onboard one spacecraft |
October 1964 |
USSR |
Voskhod 1 |
First spacewalk (EVA) |
March 1965 |
USSR |
Voskhod 2 |
First manned spacecraft to change orbit |
March 1965 |
USA |
Gemini 3 |
First mission over seven days long (long enough for a mission to the Moon and back) |
August 1965 |
USA |
Gemini 5 |
Two spacecraft maneuvering to close proximity under fine control.
The first rendezvous in space. [4] [6] |
December 1965 |
USA |
Gemini 6A |
Longest flight of the decade (13 days, 18 hours) |
December 1965 |
USA |
Gemini 7 |
First docking with another spacecraft |
March 1966 |
USA |
Gemini 8 |
First extended EVA |
June 1966 |
USA |
Gemini 9A |
First manned mission to leave Earth orbit, first to orbit the Moon |
December 1968 |
USA |
Apollo 8 |
First docking between two manned craft in Earth orbit and exchange of crews |
January 1969 |
USSR |
Soyuz 4 and Soyuz 5 |
First successful manned flight of a spacecraft capable of landing on the Moon (Apollo Lunar Module) |
March 1969 |
USA |
Apollo 9 |
First manned landing on the Moon |
July 1969 |
USA |
Apollo 11 |
[edit] Unmanned planetary missions
Milestone |
Date |
Country |
Mission |
First flyby of Venus (< 100,000km), but contact was lost |
February 1961 |
USSR |
Venera 1 |
First successful flyby of Venus (less than 35,000km) |
August 1962 |
USA |
Mariner 2 |
First Mars flyby (11,000km) but contact was lost |
November 1962 |
USSR |
Mars 1 |
First successful Mars flyby (returned pictures) |
November 1964 |
USA |
Mariner 4 |
First impact of Venus (contact lost) |
November 1965 |
USSR |
Venera 3 |
First to enter Venus' atmosphere |
June 1967 |
USSR |
Venera 4 |
First to parachute in Venus atmosphere, lost contact before landing, soft-landed? |
January 1969 |
USSR |
Venera 5 |
[edit] See also
- ^ Vanguard 2 returned data on the amount of cloud cover in February 1959
- ^ Project SCORE (December 1958) broadcast a recorded message and tested satellite communications.
- ^ G. Salakhutdinov, in a Russian periodical from 1990, relates the following quote :
"The group flight ... well, a day after the launch, the first craft was over Baykanur. If the second craft were launched now with great precision, then they would turn out to be next to each other in space. And that's what was done ... The craft turned out to be 5 kilometers from each other! Well, since, with all of the secrecy, we didn't tell the whole truth, the Western experts, who hadn't figured it out, thought that our Vostok was already equipped with orbital approach equipment. As they say, a sleight of hand isn't any kind of fraud. It was more like our competitors deceived themselves all by their lonesome. Of course, we didn't shatter their illusions."
- First Deputy Chief Designer Vasily Mishin
-- G. Salakhutdinov, "Once more about space, interview with Academician Vasiliy Pavlovich Mishin former chief designer of rocket-space equipment" (English title), Ogenek 34 (August 18-25 1990):4-5.
Translation at http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20000088626_2000122281.pdf , page 379.
- ^ a b The USSR's claimed rendezvous was two spacecraft launched into nearly intersecting (but not identical) orbits, but never coming closer than five miles. The US (and many space historians) indicate that the first true rendezvous was in 1965, when Gemini 6A shifted its orbit and maneuvered to and remained within 30 cm (about 1 foot) of Gemini 7, a precursor to docking. For further clarification and references, see Space rendezvous.
- ^ http://www.astronautix.com/flights/vostok3.htm
- ^ http://www.astronautix.com/flights/gemini6.htm
[edit] External links