Timeline of Solar System exploration
This is a timeline of Solar System exploration ordered by date of spacecraft launch. It includes:
- All spacecraft that have left Earth orbit for the purposes of Solar System exploration (or were launched with that intention but failed), including lunar probes.
- A small number of pioneering or notable Earth-orbiting craft.
It does not include:
- The great majority of Earth-orbiting satellites.
- Space probes leaving Earth orbit that are not concerned with Solar System exploration (such as space telescopes targeted at distant galaxies, cosmic background radiation observatories, and so on).
- Probes that failed at launch.
The dates listed are launch dates, but the achievements noted may have occurred some time later—in some cases, a considerable time later (for example, Voyager 2, launched 20 August 1977, did not reach Neptune until 1989).
Missions in italics are unfinished, i.e. have not yet been designated as successes or failures. Some unitalicised missions are nevertheless still operational, some in mission extension phases.
1950s
1957
- Sputnik 1 – 4 October 1957 – First Earth orbiter
- Sputnik 2 – 3 November 1957 – Earth orbiter, first animal in orbit, a dog named Laika
1958
- Explorer 1 – 1 February 1958 – Earth orbiter; first American orbiter, discovered Van Allen radiation belts
- Vanguard 1 – 17 March 1958 – Earth orbiter; oldest spacecraft still in Earth orbit
1959
- Luna 1 – 2 January 1959 – First lunar flyby (attempted lunar impact?)
- Pioneer 4 – 3 March 1959 – Lunar flyby
- Luna 2 – 12 September 1959 – First lunar impact
- Luna 3 – 4 October 1959 – Lunar flyby; First images of far side of Moon
1960s
1960
- Pioneer 5 – 11 March 1960 – Interplanetary space investigations
1961
- Venera 1 – 12 February 1961 – Venus flyby (contact lost before flyby)
- Vostok 1 – 12 April 1961 – First manned Earth orbiter
- Mercury-Redstone 3 – 5 May 1961 – First American in space
- Ranger 1 – 23 August 1961 – Attempted lunar test flight
- Ranger 2 – 18 November 1961 – Attempted lunar test flight
1962
- Ranger 3 – 26 January 1962 – Attempted lunar impact (missed Moon)
- Mercury-Atlas 6 – 20 February 1962 – First American manned Earth orbiter
- Ranger 4 – 23 April 1962 – Lunar impact (but unintentionally hit lunar farside and returned no data)
- Mariner 2 – 27 August 1962 – First successful planetary encounter, First successful Venus flyby
- Ranger 5 – 18 October 1962 – Attempted lunar impact (missed Moon)
- Mars 1 – 1 November 1962 – Mars flyby (contact lost)
1963
- Luna 4 – 2 April 1963 – Attempted lunar lander (missed Moon)
- Cosmos 21 – 11 November 1963 – Attempted Venera test flight?
1964
- Ranger 6 – 30 January 1964 – Lunar impact (cameras failed)
- Zond 1 – 2 April 1964 – Venus flyby (contact lost)
- Ranger 7 – 28 July 1964 – Lunar impact
- Mariner 3 – 5 November 1964 – Attempted Mars flyby (failed to attain correct trajectory)
- Mariner 4 – 28 November 1964 – First Mars flyby
- Zond 2 – 30 November 1964 – Mars flyby (contact lost)
1965
- Ranger 8 – 17 February 1965 – Lunar impact
- Ranger 9 – 21 March 1965 – Lunar impact
- Lincoln Calibration Sphere 1 - 6 May 1965 - Oldest spacecraft still in use
- Luna 5 – 9 May 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing)
- Luna 6 – 8 June 1965 – Attempted lunar lander (missed Moon)
- Zond 3 – 18 July 1965 – Lunar flyby
- Luna 7 – 4 October 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing)
- Venera 2 – 12 November 1965 – Venus flyby (contact lost)
- Venera 3 – 16 November 1965 – Venus lander (contact lost) – First spacecraft to reach another planet's surface, First Venus impact
- Luna 8 – 3 December 1965 – Lunar impact (attempted soft landing?)
- Pioneer 6 – 16 December 1965 – "Space weather" observations
1966 AS-201
- Luna 9 – 31 January 1966 – First lunar lander
- AS-201 – 26 February 1966 – Lunar programme test flight
- Luna 10 – 31 March 1966 – First lunar orbiter
- Surveyor 1 – 30 May 1966 – Lunar lander
- Explorer 33 – 1 July 1966 – Attempted lunar orbiter (failed to attain lunar orbit)
- Lunar Orbiter 1 – 10 August 1966 – Lunar orbiter
- Pioneer 7 – 17 August 1966 – "Space weather" observations
- Luna 11 – 24 August 1966 – Lunar orbiter
- Surveyor 2 – 20 September 1966 – Attempted lunar lander (crashed into Moon)
- Luna 12 – 22 October 1966 – Lunar orbiter
- Lunar Orbiter 2 – 6 November 1966 – Lunar orbiter
- Luna 13 – 21 December 1966 – Lunar lander
1967
- Lunar Orbiter 3 – 4 February 1967 – Lunar orbiter
- Surveyor 3 – 17 April 1967 – Lunar lander
- Lunar Orbiter 4 – 8 May 1967 – Lunar orbiter
- Venera 4 – 12 June 1967 – First Venus atmospheric probe
- Mariner 5 – 14 June 1967 – Venus flyby
- Surveyor 4 – 14 July 1967 – Attempted lunar lander (crashed into Moon)
- Explorer 35 (IMP-E) – 19 July 1967 – Lunar orbiter
- Lunar Orbiter 5 – 1 August 1967 – Lunar orbiter
- Surveyor 5 – 8 September 1967 – Lunar lander
- Surveyor 6 – 7 November 1967 – Lunar lander
- Apollo 4 – 9 November 1967 – Lunar programme test flight
- Pioneer 8 – 13 December 1967 – "Space weather" observations
1968
- Surveyor 7 – 7 January 1968 – Lunar lander
- Apollo 5 – 22 January 1968 – Lunar programme test flight
- Zond 4 – 2 March 1968 – Lunar programme test flight
- Luna 14 – 7 April 1968 – Lunar orbiter
- Zond 5 – 15 September 1968 – First lunar flyby and return to Earth, first life forms to circle the moon
- Apollo 7 – 22 October 1968 – Lunar programme test flight (manned)
- Pioneer 9 – 8 November 1968 – "Space weather" observations
- Zond 6 – 10 November 1968 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
- Apollo 8 – 21 December 1968 – First manned lunar orbiter
1969
- Venera 5 – 5 January 1969 – Venus atmospheric probe
- Venera 6 – 10 January 1969 – Venus atmospheric probe
- Mariner 6 – 25 February 1969 – Mars flyby
- Apollo 9 – 3 March 1969 – Manned lunar lander (LEM) flight test
- Mariner 7 – 27 March 1969 – Mars flyby
- Apollo 10 – 18 May 1969 – Manned lunar orbiter
- Luna E-8-5 No.402 – 14 June 1969 – Attempted lunar sample return, first attempted sample return mission
- Luna 15 – 13 July 1969 – Second attempted lunar sample return
- Apollo 11 – 16 July 1969 – First manned lunar landing and first successful sample return mission
- Zond 7 – 7 August 1969 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
- Apollo 12 – 14 November 1969 – Manned lunar landing
1970s
1970
- Apollo 13 – 11 April 1970 – Manned lunar flyby and return to Earth (manned lunar landing aborted) Farthest from Earth a human has gone
- Venera 7 – 17 August 1970 – First Venus lander
- Luna 16 – 12 September 1970 – First robotic lunar sample return
- Zond 8 – 20 October 1970 – Lunar flyby and return to Earth
- Luna 17/Lunokhod 1 – 10 November 1970 – First lunar rover
1971
- Apollo 14 – 31 January 1971 – Manned lunar landing
- Salyut 1 – 19 April 1971 – First space station
- Mariner 9 – 30 May 1971 – First Mars orbiter
- Mars 2 – 19 May 1971 – Mars orbiter and attempted lander; First Mars impact
- Mars 3 – 28 May 1971 – Mars orbiter, First Mars lander (lost contact after 14.5s) and First Mars atmospheric probe
- Apollo 15 – 26 July 1971 – Manned lunar landing; First manned lunar rover
- Luna 18 – 2 September 1971 – Attempted lunar sample return (crashed into Moon)
- Luna 19 – 28 September 1971 – Lunar orbiter
1972
- Luna 20 – 14 February 1972 – Lunar robotic sample return
- Pioneer 10 – 3 March 1972 – First Jupiter flyby
- Venera 8 – 27 March 1972 – Venus lander
- Apollo 16 – 16 April 1972 – Manned lunar landing
- Apollo 17 – 7 December 1972 – Last manned lunar landing
1973
- Luna 21/Lunokhod 2 – 8 January 1973 – Lunar rover
- Pioneer 11 – 5 April 1973 – Jupiter flyby and First Saturn flyby
- Skylab – 14 May 1973 – First American space station
- Explorer 49 (RAE-B) – 10 June 1973 – Lunar orbiter/radio astronomy
- Mars 4 – 21 July 1973 – Mars flyby (attempted Mars orbiter)
- Mars 5 – 25 July 1973 – Mars orbiter
- Mars 6 – 5 August 1973 – Mars orbiter and attempted lander (failed due to damage on Mars landing)
- Mars 7 – 9 August 1973 – Mars flyby and attempted lander (missed Mars)
- Mariner 10 – 4 November 1973 – Venus flyby and First Mercury flyby
1974
- Luna 22 – 2 June 1974 – Lunar orbiter
- Luna 23 – 28 October 1974 – Attempted lunar sample return (failed due to damage on lunar landing)
- Helios-A – 10 December 1974 – Solar observations
1975
- Venera 9 – 8 June 1975 – First Venus orbiter and lander; First images from surface of Venus
- Venera 10 – 14 June 1975 – Venus orbiter and lander
- Viking 1 – 20 August 1975 – Mars orbiter and lander; First lander returning data and First pictures from Martian surface
- Viking 2 – 9 September 1975 – Mars orbiter and lander
1976
- Helios-B – 15 January 1976 – Solar observations, Closest solar approach (0.29 AU)
- Luna 24 – 9 August 1976 – Lunar robotic sample return
1977
- Voyager 2 – 20 August 1977 – Jupiter/Saturn/first Uranus/first Neptune flyby
- Voyager 1 – 5 September 1977 – Jupiter/Saturn flyby, Farthest human-made object – currently (2016) about 135 AU
1978
- Pioneer Venus 1 – 20 May 1978 – Venus orbiter
- Pioneer Venus 2 – 8 August 1978 – Venus atmospheric probes
- ISEE-3 – 12 August 1978 – Solar wind investigations; later redesignated International Cometary Explorer and performed Comet Giacobini-Zinner and Comet Halley flybys – First comet flyby
- Venera 11 – 9 September 1978 – Venus flyby and lander
- Venera 12 – 14 September 1978 – Venus flyby and lander
1980s
1981
- Venera 13 – 30 October 1981 – Venus flyby and lander
- Venera 14 – 4 November 1981 – Venus flyby and lander
1983
1984
- Vega 1 – 15 December 1984 – Venus flyby, lander and first balloon; continued on to Comet Halley flyby
- Vega 2 – 21 December 1984 – Venus flyby, lander and balloon; continued on to Comet Halley flyby
1985
- Sakigake – 7 January 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
- Giotto – 2 July 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
- Suisei (Planet-A) – 18 August 1985 – Comet Halley flyby
1986
- Mir – 20 February 1986 – First modular space station (completion 1996)
1988
- Phobos 1 – 7 July 1988 – Attempted Mars orbiter/Phobos landers (contact lost)
- Phobos 2 – 12 July 1988 – Mars orbiter/attempted Phobos landers (contact lost)
1989
- Magellan – 4 May 1989 – Venus orbiter
- Galileo – 18 October 1989 – Venus flyby, first Asteroid flyby, first Asteroid moon discovery, first Jupiter orbiter/atmospheric probe
1990s
1990
- Hiten (MUSES-A) – 24 January 1990 – Lunar flyby and orbiter
- Hubble Space Telescope – Orbital space telescope
- Ulysses – 6 October 1990 – Solar polar orbiter
1991
- Yohkoh (Solar-A) – 30 August 1991 – Solar observations
1992
- Mars Observer – 25 September 1992 – Attempted Mars orbiter (contact lost)
1994
- Clementine – 25 January 1994 – Lunar orbiter/attempted asteroid flyby
- WIND – 1 November 1994 – Solar wind observations
1995
- SOHO – 2 December 1995 – Solar observatory
1996
- NEAR Shoemaker – 17 February 1996 – Eros orbiter, first near-Earth asteroid flyby, first asteroid orbit and first asteroid landing
- Mars Global Surveyor – 7 November 1996 – Mars orbiter
- Mars 96 – 16 November 1996 – Attempted Mars orbiter/landers (failed to escape Earth orbit)
- Mars Pathfinder – 4 December 1996 – Mars lander and first planetary rover
1997
- ACE – 25 August 1997 – Solar wind and "space weather" observations
- Cassini–Huygens – 15 October 1997 – First Saturn orbiter and first outer planet lander
- AsiaSat 3/HGS-1 – 24 December 1997 – Lunar flyby
1998
- Lunar Prospector – 7 January 1998 – Lunar orbiter
- Nozomi (also known as Planet-B) – 3 July 1998 – Attempted Mars orbiter (failed to enter Mars orbit)
- Deep Space 1 (DS1) – 24 October 1998 – Asteroid and comet flyby
- – 20 November 1998 – International Space Station (planned completion 2013)
- Mars Climate Orbiter – 11 December 1998 – Attempted Mars orbiter (orbit insertion failed)
1999
- Mars Polar Lander/Deep Space 2 (DS2) – 3 January 1999 – Attempted Mars lander/penetrators (contact lost)
- Stardust – 7 February 1999 – First comet coma sample return – returned 15 January 2006
2000s
2001
- 2001 Mars Odyssey – 7 April 2001 – Mars orbiter
- Genesis – 8 August 2001 – First solar wind sample return
2002
- CONTOUR – 3 July 2002 – Attempted flyby of three comet nuclei (lost in space)
2003
- Hayabusa (MUSES-C) – 9 May 2003 – Asteroid lander and First sample return from asteroid
- Mars Express/Beagle 2 – 1 June 2003 – Mars orbiter/lander (lander failure)
- Mars Exploration Rover Spirit – 10 June 2003 – Mars rover
- Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity – 7 July 2003 – Mars rover
- SMART-1 – 27 September 2003 – Lunar orbiter
- Shenzhou 5 – 15 October 2003 – China's first manned Earth orbiter
2004
- Rosetta/Philae – 2 March 2004 – First comet orbiter and lander (Landed in November 2014)
- MESSENGER – 3 August 2004 – First Mercury orbiter (Achieved orbit 18 March 2011)
2005
- Deep Impact – 12 January 2005 – First comet impact
- Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter – 12 August 2005 – Mars orbiter
- Venus Express – 9 November 2005 – Venus polar orbiter
2006
- New Horizons – 19 January 2006 – First Pluto/Charon flyby (on 14 July 2015)[1]
- Hinode (Solar-B) – 22 September 2006 – Solar orbiter
- STEREO – 26 October 2006 – Two spacecraft, solar orbiters
2007
- Phoenix – 4 August 2007 – Mars polar lander (Mars landing on 25 May 2008)
- SELENE (Kaguya) – 14 September 2007 – Lunar orbiters
- Dawn – 27 September 2007 – Asteroid Ceres and Vesta orbiter (Entered orbit around Vesta on 16 July 2011 and around Ceres on 6 March 2015)
- Chang'e 1 – 24 October 2007 – Lunar orbiter
2008
- Chandrayaan-1 – 22 October 2008 – Lunar orbiter and impactor – Discovered water on the Moon
2009
- Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter/LCROSS – 18 June 2009 – Lunar polar orbiter and lunar impactor
2010s
2010
- Solar Dynamics Observatory – 11 February 2010 – Continuous solar monitoring
- Akatsuki (Planet-C) – 20 May 2010 – Venus orbiter (orbit insertion failed in 2010 / successful orbit insertion on 7 December 2015)
- PICARD – 15 June 2010 – Solar monitoring
- Chang'e 2 – 1 October 2010 – Lunar orbiter, Asteroid 4179 Toutatis flyby
2011
- Juno – 5 August 2011 – Jupiter orbiter
- GRAIL – 10 September 2011 – Two spacecraft, Lunar orbiters
- Tiangong (Project 921-2) - 29 September 2011 - First Chinese space station[2]
- Fobos-Grunt and Yinghuo-1 – 8 November 2011 – Phobos orbiter, lander and sample return (Russia), Mars orbiter (China) – failed to escape Earth orbit
- Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity Rover) – 26 November 2011 – large Mars 900 kg Rover (landed 6 August 2012)
2012
- Van Allen Probes (RBSP) - 30 August 2012 - Earth Van Allen radiation belts study
2013
- IRIS – 27 June 2013 – Solar observations
- LADEE – 6 September 2013 – Lunar orbiter
- Hisaki - 14 September 2013 - Planetary atmosphere observatory
- Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan) – 5 November 2013 – Mars orbiter
- MAVEN – 18 November 2013 – Mars orbiter
- Chang'e 3 – 1 December 2013 - First Chinese lunar lander and rover (most recent lander since Russian Luna 24 in 1976)
2014
- Chang'e 5-T1 – 23 October 2014 - Lunar flyby/orbiter and Earth reentry probe; technology demonstration to prepare for Chang'e 5 mission
- Hayabusa 2 / MASCOT and PROCYON – 3 December 2014 – Asteroid lander and sample return / mobile Asteroid lander, Asteroid flyby (flyby cancelled due to engine failure)
- Exploration Flight Test 1 – 5 December 2014 – Unmanned Earth orbital test of Orion interplanetary vehicle.
2015
2016
- ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter and EDM lander – 14 March 2016 – Mars orbiter and lander (lander failure)
- OSIRIS-REx – 8 September 2016 – Asteroid sample return mission
System Spacecraft |
Jupiter | Saturn | Uranus | Neptune | Pluto |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pioneer 10 | 1973 flyby | ||||
Pioneer 11 | 1974 flyby | 1979 flyby | |||
Voyager 1 | 1979 flyby | 1980 flyby | |||
Voyager 2 | 1979 flyby | 1981 flyby | 1986 flyby | 1989 flyby | |
Galileo | 1995–2003 orbiter; 1995, 2003 atmospheric |
||||
Ulysses | 1992, 2004 gravity assist | ||||
Cassini–Huygens | 2000 gravity assist | 2004– orbiter; 2005 Titan lander |
|||
New Horizons | 2007 gravity assist | 2015 flyby | |||
Juno | 2016– orbiter |
Planned or scheduled
2017
- Chang'e 5 – China's first lunar sample return mission
- Team Indus – 28 December 2017 – Private Lunar Rover, part of the Google Lunar X Prize
- Hakuto – 28 December 2017 – Private Lunar Rover, part of the Google Lunar X Prize
- SpaceIL – Late 2017 – Private Lunar Lander, part of the Google Lunar X Prize
- Moon Express – Late 2017 – Private Lunar Lander, part of the Google Lunar X Prize
- Synergy Moon – Late 2017 – Private Lunar Rover, part of the Google Lunar X Prize
2018
- Chandrayaan-2 – Lunar orbiter and rover
- InSight – 5 May – Mars lander
- Solar Probe Plus – 30 July 2018 – Solar orbiter, closest solar approach (0.04 AU)
- BepiColombo – October 2018[3] – Mercury orbiters
- SOLO – October 2018 – Solar orbiter
- James Webb Space Telescope - October 2018 - Orbital space telescope
- Chang'e 4 – end of 2018 - Lunar lander and rover, the first landing on the lunar far side
2019
- SLIM – Japanese lunar lander and rover[4][5]
- Exploration Mission 1 – Unmanned lunar orbital test of Orion interplanetary vehicle and Space Launch System.
- Aditya - 2017/2018 - Solar observations (2019 or 2020)
- Astrobotic Technology – Private lunar lander and rover mission
2020
- Chang'e 6 – Lunar sample return mission
- 2020 Chinese Mars Mission – Mars orbiter, lander and rover
- ExoMars rover – July 2020 – Russian Mars lander and European rover
- SpaceX Red Dragon – Unmanned Mars lander, first private mission to Mars
- Mars 2020 rover mission
- Mars Hope - Emirati Mars orbiter[6][7]
- Mars Terahertz Microsatellite – Japanese Mars orbiter, first microsatellite to Mars[8][9]
2021
- ISRO Orbital Vehicle – First Indian manned orbiter
- Lucy - Flyby six Jupiter Trojan asteroids
2022
- Jupiter Icy Moon Explorer – Mission to explore Jupiter and its icy moons.
- Europa Clipper launch
- Psyche - Orbit the metallic asteroid 16 Psyche
2023
- Exploration Mission 2 - manned lunar flyby and return to Earth
2024
- Venera-D – Venus orbiter, lander
2025
- Luna-Glob lander (Luna-25) – Lunar orbiter, lander
2028
- Manned lunar orbiter[10]
2030
2031
- Mercury-P – First Mercury lander
2037
- Lunnyj Poligon – Completion of robotic lunar base
- first Human mission to Mars
2040–60
- Manned phase of the Chinese Mars exploration program[12]
- Manned phase of the Russian Mars exploration program[13]
Gallery
- Luna 16
First unmanned lunar sample return - Pioneer 11
First Saturn flyby - Mariner 10
First Mercury flyby - Helios 2
Closest solar approach - International Cometary Explorer
First comet flyby - Galileo
First asteroid flyby
First asteroid moon discovery
First Jupiter orbiter
First Jupiter atmospheric probe - Mars Pathfinder
First successful Mars rover - Cassini–Huygens
First Saturn orbiter - Huygens probe
First Titan lander - Genesis
First solar wind sample return - Deep Impact
First comet impact - Rosetta/Philae
First comet orbiter and lander
See also
- Discovery and exploration of the Solar System
- List of missions to the Moon
- List of Solar System probes
- New Frontiers program
- Out of the Cradle (book) - scientific speculation on future missions.
- Space Race
- Timeline of artificial satellites and space probes
- Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their moons
- Timeline of first orbital launches by country
- Timeline of space travel by nationality
References
- 1 2 Chang, Kenneth (18 July 2015). "The Long, Strange Trip to Pluto, and How NASA Nearly Missed It". New York Times. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
- ↑ "China's space program shoots for moon, Mars, Venus". The Guardian. 13 July 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2011.
- ↑ "BepiColombo launch rescheduled for October 2018". sci.esa.int. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ↑ "Japan delays launch of unmanned lunar lander to second half of fiscal 2019". The Japan Times. June 4, 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-22.
- ↑ "The tiny rover payload in SLIM mission" (PDF). 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-23.
- ↑ "UAE plans to launch mission to Mars in 2021". Thenational.ae. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ↑ "UAE’s names Mars probe Hope". Thenational.ae. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ↑ "惑星資源探査 ⼩型テラヘルツ探査機" (PDF) (in Japanese). National Institute of Information and Communications Technology. 25 January 2017. Retrieved 2017-05-13.
- ↑ Yamazaki, Keisuke (March 27, 2017). "Japan planning 2020 mission to put satellite in Martian orbit". The Asahi Shimbun. Retrieved 2017-05-13.
- 1 2 "Russia Plans to Colonize Moon by 2030, Newspaper Reports". The Moscow Times. 8 May 2014. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
- ↑ "Moon may light man's future". China Daily. 15 August 2009.
- ↑ "中国嫦娥探月工程进展顺利 进度将有望加快--军事频道-中华网-中国最大职业人士门户". military.china.com. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ↑ Пилотируемый полет на Марс будет возможен после 2040 года - Роскосмос. versii.com (in Russian). Retrieved 22 August 2014.
External links
- NASA Lunar & Planetary Science
- NASA Solar System Strategic Exploration Plans
- Soviet Lunar, Martian, Venusian and Terrestrial Space Image Catalog