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[[Virgin Galactic Unity 25|Virgin Galactic ''Unity'' 25]] mission took place 25 May 2023. This was the first mission for Virgin Galactic's suborbital spaceplane [[VSS Unity|VSS ''Unity'']] since 2021. On 29 June 2023, [[Virgin Galactic]] flew their first commercial suborbital spaceflight mission, [[Galactic 01]], with their suborbital spaceplane VSS ''Unity''. Onboard ''Unity'' were three employees of the company and three passengers (whose flight had been paid from outside the company) from the [[Italian Air Force]] and [[National Research Council (Italy)|Italy’s National Research Council]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2023/06/29/travel/virgin-galactic-launch-italian-air-force-scn |title=Virgin Galactic has sold 800 tickets to the edge of space. The first customers just took flight |date=June 29, 2023 |author1=Jackie Wattles |website=edition.cnn.com |access-date=1 July 2023}}</ref> On 10 August [[Virgin Galactic]] flew their [[Galactic 02]] mission, the first [[VSS Unity|VSS ''Unity'']] flight carrying a space tourist. [[Galactic 03]] mission followed 8 September.
[[Virgin Galactic Unity 25|Virgin Galactic ''Unity'' 25]] mission took place 25 May 2023. This was the first mission for Virgin Galactic's suborbital spaceplane [[VSS Unity|VSS ''Unity'']] since 2021. On 29 June 2023, [[Virgin Galactic]] flew their first commercial suborbital spaceflight mission, [[Galactic 01]], with their suborbital spaceplane VSS ''Unity''. Onboard ''Unity'' were three employees of the company and three passengers (whose flight had been paid from outside the company) from the [[Italian Air Force]] and [[National Research Council (Italy)|Italy’s National Research Council]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2023/06/29/travel/virgin-galactic-launch-italian-air-force-scn |title=Virgin Galactic has sold 800 tickets to the edge of space. The first customers just took flight |date=June 29, 2023 |author1=Jackie Wattles |website=edition.cnn.com |access-date=1 July 2023}}</ref> On 10 August [[Virgin Galactic]] flew their [[Galactic 02]] mission, the first [[VSS Unity|VSS ''Unity'']] flight carrying a space tourist. [[Galactic 03]] mission followed 8 September.

[[SpaceX]] plans to fly [[Polaris Dawn]] in December, a [[Crew Dragon]] mission including the first commercial [[spacewalk]].


=== Rocket innovation ===
=== Rocket innovation ===

Revision as of 23:21, 24 September 2023

2023 in spaceflight
The Psyche mission to the metal asteroid of the same name is scheduled to launch in 2023.
JUICE is an ESA spacecraft to explore three of Jupiter's moons, launched in April 2023.
Highlights from spaceflight in 2023[a]
Orbital launches
First3 January
Last24 September
Total156
Successes147
Failures9
Partial failures0
Catalogued146
National firsts
Spaceflight
 Oman (suborbital spaceflight due to failed orbital launch)
Satellite
Space traveller
Rockets
Maiden flights
Retirements
Crewed flights
Orbital4
Orbital travellers15
Suborbital4
Suborbital travellers24
Total travellers39

This article documents notable and expected spaceflight events during the year 2023.

Overview

Astronomy and Astrophysics

On 1 July, European Space Agency's (ESA) Euclid satellite was launched towards Sun-Earth L2 point by a Falcon 9 rocket. The satellite will observe distant galaxies to study dark matter and dark energy.

JAXA launched XRISM (X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission) X-ray space telescope and SLIM lunar lander on September 6.

Heliophysics

On 2 September, ISRO launched Aditya-L1 to study the Sun.

Exploration of the Solar System

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

ISRO launched its third lunar mission Chandrayaan-3 on 14 July 2023 at 9:05 UTC;[2] it consists of lander, rover and a propulsion module,[3] and successfully landed in the south pole region of the Moon on 23 August 2023.

Russian lunar lander Luna 25 was launched on 10 August 2023, 23:10 UTC, atop a Soyuz-2.1b rocket from the Vostochny Cosmodrome.[4] It is the first Russian attempt to land a spacecraft on the Moon since the Soviet lander Luna 24 in 1974. It crashed on the Moon on 19 August after technical glitches.

JAXA launched SLIM (Smart Lander for Investigating Moon) lunar lander (carrying a mini rover) and a space telescope (XRISM) on 6 September.

The OSIRIS-REx mission returned to Earth on 24 September with samples collected from asteroid Bennu.[5]

NASA plans to launch the Psyche spacecraft, an orbiter mission that will explore the origin of planetary cores by studying the metallic asteroid 16 Psyche, in October 2023 on a Falcon Heavy launch vehicle.

Human spaceflight

A new record for the number of people in space at once was reached on 25 May 2023. 20 people were in space simultaneously, with eleven people aboard the ISS, three on Tiangong, and six on VSS Unity.[6] 5 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 from Shenzhou 15 and 16, 7 people from Expedition 69 on the ISS as well 4 crew members from Axiom-2 also on the ISS.[7][6]

Space tourism

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 successful return of the crew to Earth on 31 May 2023.

Virgin Galactic Unity 25 mission took place 25 May 2023. This was the first mission for Virgin Galactic's suborbital spaceplane VSS Unity since 2021. On 29 June 2023, Virgin Galactic flew their first commercial suborbital spaceflight mission, Galactic 01, with their suborbital spaceplane VSS Unity. Onboard Unity were three employees of the company and three passengers (whose flight had been paid from outside the company) from the Italian Air Force and Italy’s National Research Council.[8] On 10 August Virgin Galactic flew their Galactic 02 mission, the first VSS Unity flight carrying a space tourist. Galactic 03 mission followed 8 September.

Rocket innovation

The maiden flight of United Launch Alliance's Vulcan Centaur[9] is planned for 2023, along with other smaller rockets.

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

On 7 March, JAXA/MHI H3's maiden flight was terminated in-flight due to failure to ignite the second stage, resulting in the loss of the ALOS-3 land observation satellite.[11]

On 23 March, Relativity Space's Terran 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 passed max q and continued to perform nominally. However, after stage separation, the second stage failed to ignite, ending the mission.[12] Following the failed launch, Relativity retired the rocket in favor of developing the much larger, reusable Terran R vehicle.[13]

On 2 April, Space Pioneer's Tianlong-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.[14]

On 20 April, SpaceX's Starship had its first test flight,[15] aiming to complete about three-quarters of an orbit and landing in the Pacific Ocean northwest of Kauai.[16] Some 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 space flight test with the Gold Chain Cowboy solid-fueled rocket.[17]

Virgin Orbit declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 4, 2023.[18] The following dissolution of the company led to the retirement of LauncherOne rocket, with the unsuccessful launch of 9 January 2023 remaining the last flight of LauncherOne.

On 30 May, the North Korean Chollima-1 made its first orbital launch attempt, carrying the military reconnaissance satellite Malligyong-1.[19] However, the launch failed to achieve orbit when the second stage ignited too early in the mission.[20] The launch vehicle crashed into the Yellow Sea.[21]

On 5 July, Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket flew its final mission.

On 12 July, LandSpace's Zhuque-2 rocket, in its second flight, became the world's first methane-fuelled rocket to successfully reach orbit.[22]

On 2 August, Antares 230+ rocket flew its final mission.

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

SpaceX's Falcon family broke the yearly world record for most launches attempts (irrespective of launch outcome) by any rocket family on 16 September 2023, i.e, 64 set by the R-7 family in 1980.

Satellite technology

On January 27, ESA reported the successful demonstration of a braking sail-based satellite deorbiter, ADEO, which could be used by space debris mitigation measures.[23][24]

In April, Chinese media first reported on tests of flexible organic solar cells on balloons in the 35 km stratosphere.[25][26]

On 29 July a Falcon Heavy rocket launched the Jupiter-3 (EchoStar-24)[27] communications satellite to geosynchronous orbit. With a mass of over 9 tonnes, EchoStar's Jupiter-3 is the heaviest geostationary satellite ever launched.[28]

On 1 June, Caltech reported the first successful demonstration of solar energy from space via its SSPD-1 spacecraft.[29][30]

Orbital launches

List of orbital launches
Month Num. of successes Num. of failures Num. of partial failures
January 14 2 0
February 12 0 0
March 22 2 0
April 11 1 0
May 19 1 0
June 13 0 0
July 18 0 0
August 21 1 0
September 17 2 0
October TBD TBD TBD
November TBD TBD TBD
December TBD TBD TBD
Total 147 9 0

Deep-space rendezvous

Date (UTC) Spacecraft Event Remarks
21 March Hakuto-R Mission 1 Lunar orbit insertion Success[31]
25 April Hakuto-R Mission 1 Lunar landing Communications were lost, landing failed.[32]
19 June BepiColombo Third gravity assist at Mercury
31 July Juno 53rd perijove On this perijove Juno flew by Io at a distance of 22,000 km.[33]
5 August Chandrayaan 3 Lunar orbit insertion Success[34]
16 August Luna 25 Lunar orbit insertion Success[35]
19 August Luna 25 Lunar landing Communications were lost, crashed onto the moon's surface.[36]
21 August Parker Solar Probe Sixth gravity assist at Venus
23 August Chandrayaan 3 Lunar landing Success[37]
24 September OSIRIS-REx Sample return to Earth
1 November Lucy Flyby of 152830 Dinkinesh Lucy will approach 450 km (280 mi) from the asteroid.[38]
30 December Juno 57th perijove On the day of this perijove, Juno will fly by Io. Orbital period around Jupiter reduced to 35 days.[39][40]

Extravehicular activities (EVAs)

Start Date/Time Duration End Time Spacecraft Crew Remarks
20 January 2023
13:14
7 hours 21 minutes 20:35 Expedition 68
ISS Quest
Japan Koichi Wakata
United States Nicole 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 of SpaceX 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 astronaut Zena Cardman was Ground IV, assisted by JAXA astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, who was the Capcom for the astronauts inside the ISS during the spacewalk.[41][42][43]
2 February 2023
12:45
6 hours 41 minutes 19:26 Expedition 68
ISS Quest
United States Nicole Mann
Japan Koichi Wakata
Final spacewalk to install the mounting brackets for the 1A solar array in preparation for the delivery of IROSA on SpaceX 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 astronaut Zena Cardman was Ground IV.[44][45]
9 February 2023
9:10
7 hours 6 minutes 16:16 Shenzhou 15
TSS Wentian airlock
China Fei Junlong
China Zhang 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.[46] It is China's longest spacewalk to date.[47]
2 March 2023
??:??
? hours ? minutes ??:?? Shenzhou 15

TSS Wentian airlock

China Fei Junlong
China Zhang 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.[48] 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.[49]

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

TSS Wentian airlock

China Fei Junlong
China Zhang 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.[50] Other tasks were to dump trash bags during spacewalk.[51]

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

TSS Wentian airlock

China Fei Junlong
China Zhang 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.[52]
19 April
01:40
7 hours 55 minutes 09:35 Expedition 69

ISS Poisk

Russia Sergey Prokopyev
Russia Dmitry Petelin
Ninth in a series of spacewalks to outfit Nauka and to prepare ERA for operations. The spacewalkers used ERA 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 to Nauka 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 to Nauka on the next spacewalk and stowed the ERA 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.[53]
28 April
13:11
7 hours 1 minute 20:12 Expedition 68
ISS Quest
United States Stephen Bowen
United Arab Emirates Sultan 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 Astronaut Anne McClain was Ground IV CAPCOM.[54][55][56]
4 May
20:00
7 hours 11 minutes 03:11 Expedition 69

ISS Poisk

Russia Sergey Prokopyev
Russia Dmitry Petelin
Tenth in a series of spacewalks to outfit Nauka and to prepare ERA for operations. The spacewalkers removed bolts, removed covers, disconnected cables, and used ERA to transfer the airlock over to Nauka 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 when ERA 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.[57][58][59][60]
12 May
15:47
5 hours 14 minutes 23:01 Expedition 69

ISS Poisk

Russia Sergey Prokopyev
Russia Dmitry Petelin
Eleventh and final spacewalk to outfit Nauka and to prepare ERA for operations. To wrap up work on Nauka, 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 on ERA's boom to allow for translation on future spacewalks.[61][62]
9 June
13:15
6 hours 3 minutes 19:18 Expedition 69
ISS Quest
United States Stephen Bowen
United States Woody 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.[63][64]
15 June
12:42
5 hours 35 minutes 18:17 Expedition 69
ISS Quest
United States Stephen Bowen
United States Woody 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. [65][66]
22 June
14:24
6 hours 24 minutes 20:48 Expedition 69

ISS Poisk

Russia Sergey Prokopyev
Russia Dmitry Petelin
Prokopyev and Petelin exited the Poisk airlock and routed an Ethernet cable to the port experiment frame on the Zvezda Service Module, jettisoned experiment hardware including the TMTC Monoblock antennas, the highspeed data transmission antenna, and the Seismo Prognos payload, installed a data transmission radio onto the port frame, removed experiments from the Zvezda Service Module, photographed Zvezda including the thrusters so they can patch the leak, inspected an antenna, and retrieved the Biorisk containers. As a getahead they cleaned the windows on the Russian segment, reposition the Plume Measurement Unit, and jettisoned a towel.[67][68]
20 July 2023
05:45
7 hours 55 minutes 13:40 Shenzhou 16
TSS Wentian airlock
China Jing Haipeng
China Zhu 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.[69]
9 August
14:44
6 hours 35 minutes 21:19 Expedition 69

ISS Poisk

Russia Sergey Prokopyev
Russia Dmitry Petelin
Twelfth and final spacewalk to outfit Nauka and to prepare ERA for operations. Both cosmonauts ventured outside the station’s Poisk Airlock to attach three debris shields to the Rassvet module. They also tested the sturdiness of the last MLM outfitting called the ERA portable workpost, that will be affixed to the end of the European robotic arm attached to the Nauka multipurpose laboratory module.[70][71][72]

Space debris events

Date/Time (UTC) Source object Event type Pieces tracked Remarks
4 January Russia Kosmos 2499 Breakup 85 Energetic fragmentation event; Cause Unknown
11 March United States Orbcomm F36 Breakup 7 Unknown; likely energetic fragmentation event caused by a malfunction in the hydrazine orbit adjust system[73][74]
21 August European Union Vega VV02 VESPA adapter Breakup 7 Unknown; likely debris impact[75][76]

Orbital launch statistics

By country

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.

China: 44Europe: 2India: 7Iran: 0Israel: 1Japan: 3North Korea: 2Russia: 13South Korea: 1USA: 83
Country Launches Successes Failures Partial
failures
Remarks
 China 44 43 1 0
 Europe 2 2 0 0
 India 7 7 0 0
 Israel 1 1 0 0
 Japan 3 2 1 0
 North Korea 2 0 2 0
 Russia 13 13 0 0
 South Korea 1 1 0 0
 United States 83 78 5 0 Includes Electron launches from Mahia
World 156 147 9 0

By rocket

By family

By type

By configuration

By spaceport

10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
China
France
India
Israel
Japan
Kazakhstan
New Zealand
North Korea
Russia
South Korea
United Kingdom
United States
Site Country Launches Successes Failures Partial failures Remarks
Baikonur  Kazakhstan 7 7 0 0
Cape Canaveral  United States 41 40 1 0
Cornwall  United Kingdom 1 0 1 0 First launch
Jiuquan  China 24 23 1 0
Kennedy  United States 10 10 0 0
Kourou  France 2 2 0 0
Mahia  New Zealand 6 5 1 0
MARS  United States 3 3 0 0
Naro  South Korea 1 1 0 0
PSCA  United States 1 0 1 0
Palmachim  Israel 1 1 0 0
Plesetsk  Russia 3 3 0 0
Satish Dhawan  India 7 7 0 0
Sohae  North Korea 2 0 2 0
Starbase  United States 1 0 1 0 First orbital launch
Taiyuan  China 8 8 0 0
Tanegashima  Japan 3 2 1 0
Vandenberg  United States 20 20 0 0
Vostochny  Russia 3 3 0 0
Wenchang  China 2 2 0 0
Xichang  China 9 9 0 0
Yellow Sea  China 1 1 0 0
Total 156 147 9 0

By orbit

  •   Transatmospheric
  •   Low Earth
  •   Low Earth (ISS)
  •   Low Earth (CSS)
  •   Low Earth (SSO)
  •   Low Earth (polar)
  •   Low Earth (retrograde)
  •   Medium Earth
  •   Molniya
  •   Geosynchronous
  •   Tundra
  •   High Earth
  •   Lunar transfer
  •   Heliocentric
  •  
Orbital regime Launches Achieved Not achieved Accidentally
achieved
Remarks
Transatmospheric 1 0 1 0
Low Earth / Sun-synchronous 127 119 9 0 Including flights to ISS and Tiangong
Geosynchronous / Tundra / GTO 22 22 0 0
Medium Earth / Molniya 3 3 0 0
High Earth / Lunar transfer 1 1 0 0
Heliocentric orbit / Planetary transfer 2 2 0 0
Total 156 147 9 0

Suborbital launch statistics

By country

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.

Brazil: 1Canada: 3China: 2France: 1Germany: 1India: 0Iran: 1Israel: 0Japan: 0The Netherlands: 0North Korea: 6Pakistan: 1Russia: 2Slovenia: 0South Korea: 1Taiwan: 0Turkey: 1United Kingdom: 0USA: 24Ukraine: 0Yemen: 0
Country Launches Successes Failures Partial
failures
Remarks
 Brazil 1 1 0 0
 Canada 3 2 1 0
 China 2 2 0 0
 France 1 1 0 0
 Germany 1 0 1 0
 Iran 1 1 0 0
 North Korea 6 6 0 0
 Pakistan 1 0 1 0
 Russia 2 1 1 0
 South Korea 1 1 0 0
 Turkey 1 1 0 0
 United States 24 20 4 0
World 44 36 8 0

Planned maiden flights

Notes

  1. ^ Top: The Psyche mission to the metal asteroid of the same name is scheduled to launch in 2023.
    Bottom: ESA's Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer launched in April 2023.

References

  1. ^ Davenport, Justin (14 April 2023). "ESA launches JUICE to Jupiter's icy moons atop Ariane 5".
  2. ^ BBC News (14 July 2023). "India's Chandrayaan-3 rocket blasts into space for Moon mission". BBC News. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  3. ^ "Chandrayaan-3 Details". ISRO. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  4. ^ David, Leonard. "Russia launches Luna-25 moon lander, its 1st lunar probe in 47 years". Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  5. ^ Tillman, Nola Taylor; Howell, Elizabeth (11 November 2022). "OSIRIS-REx: NASA's asteroid study and sample return mission". Space.com. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  6. ^ a b "Jonathan's Space Report | Human Spaceflight: Rides". planet4589.org. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  7. ^ updated, Robert Z. Pearlman last (30 May 2023). "New record! 17 people are in Earth orbit at the same time right now". Space.com. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  8. ^ Jackie Wattles (29 June 2023). "Virgin Galactic has sold 800 tickets to the edge of space. The first customers just took flight". edition.cnn.com. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  9. ^ "ULA Sets Path Forward for Inaugural Vulcan Flight Test". ULA. 12 October 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  10. ^ Foust, Jeff (10 January 2023). "First ABL Space Systems launch fails". SpaceNews. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  11. ^ Roston, Michael; Dooley, Ben; Ueno, Hisako (7 March 2023). "New Japanese Rocket Is Destroyed During First Test Flight to Space". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  12. ^ Wall, Mike (23 March 2023). "Relativity Space launches world's first 3D-printed rocket on historic test flight, but fails to reach orbit". Space.com. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  13. ^ Sheetz, Michael (12 April 2023). "Relativity goes 'all in' on larger reusable rocket, shifting 3D-printing approach after first launch". CNBC. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
  14. ^ China 'N Asia Spaceflight [@CNSpaceflight] (2 April 2023). "🚀 History made on April 02, 2023! Liftoff at ~08:48UTC, SPACE-PIONEER's Tianlong-2 successfully launched Jinta cubesat from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. 🎉 World's first startup to successfully launch a liquid fueled rocket to orbit on first attempt" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  15. ^ Baylor, Michael. "Starship-Super Heavy (Prototype) | Orbital Test Flight". Next Spaceflight. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  16. ^ Clark, Stephen (13 May 2021). "SpaceX outlines plans for Starship orbital test flight". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  17. ^ Messier, Doug (25 April 2023). "Evolution Space Launches Rocket on Suborbital Flight From Mojave Desert". Parabolic Arc. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  18. ^ Roulette, Joey (4 April 2023). "Branson's Virgin Orbit files for bankruptcy". Reuters. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  19. ^ AP (31 May 2023). "North Korea spy satellite launch fails as rocket falls into the sea". The Indian Express. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  20. ^ "Why does North Korea want a spy satellite so badly, and what went wrong with its attempt to launch one?". www.cbsnews.com. 31 May 2023. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  21. ^ Yoonjung Seo; Junko Ogura; Brad Lendon (31 May 2023). "North Korea says satellite launch fails, plans to try again". edition.cnn.com. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  22. ^ Jones, Andrew (12 July 2023). "China's Landspace reaches orbit with methane-powered Zhuque-2 rocket". SpaceNews. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
  23. ^ Young, Chris (9 February 2023). "ESA successfully deploys braking sail for deorbiting small satellites". interestingengineering.com. Archived from the original on 9 February 2023. Retrieved 15 February 2023.
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Generic references:
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