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The first man-made object to orbit the Earth is launched by the U.S.S.R. and remains in orbit until January 4, 1958.
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Carrying the dog Laika for 7 days in orbit, Sputink II is launched by the U.S.S.R., and remains in orbit until April 13, 1958.
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The first U.S. satellite in orbit lifts off at Cape Canaveral using a modified ABMA-JPL Jupiter-C rocket. It carries a scientific experiment of James A. Van Allen, and discovers the Earth's radiation belt.
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Launched by a Jupiter-C rocket, and fails to reach orbit.
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Launched into orbit, and continues to transmit for 3 years.
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Launced by the U.S.S.R.
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Founded, taking over existing National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics.
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U.S. - IGY space probe, launched to a height of 70,700 miles.
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The first man-made satellite to orbit the sun is launched by the U.S.S.R.
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The fourth U.S.-IGY space probe was launched by a Juno II rocket and achieved an earth-moon trajectory, passing within 37,000 miles of the moon. It then fell into a solar orbit, becoming the first U.S. sun orbiter.
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Launched, impacting on the moon on September 13 carrying a copy of the Soviet coat of arms, and becoming the first man-made object to hit the moon.
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The translunar satellite is launched, orbiting the moon and photographing 70 percent of the far side of the moon.
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The first successful weather satellite is launched by the U.S.
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The first U.S. camera-equipped Corona spy satellite.
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Launched by the U.S.S.R., carrying Cosmonaut Yuri A. Gargarin, the first man in space. He orbits the Earth once.
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Carries Alan B. Shepard,Jr., the first U.S. Astronaut into space, in a suborbital flight.
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Launched by the U.S.S.R., carrying Cosmonaut Gherman Titov, the first day-long Soviet space flight.
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Lifts off with John H. Glenn, Jr., the first American in orbit, and orbits the Earth three times.
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Launched with M. Scott Carpenter, making three orbits.
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U.S. satellite, beams the first live transatlantic telecast.
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The first successful planetary spacecraft, flies past Venus, and enters a solar orbit.
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Martin Schmidt interprets the behavior of 3C 273 - the first known quasar.
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Carries Soviet Cosmonaut Valentia Tereshkova, the first woman in space and orbits the Earth 48 times.
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Relays the first close-range photographs of the moon.
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The first space walk is made by Cosmonaut Alexei A. Leonov. Duration is 12 minutes.
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First manned flight of the GEmini program carrying Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young. Made three orbits around the earth.
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Transmits high-quality images of the moon, many of which were shown live in the first television spectacular about the moon.
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Edward White II makes the first U.S. space walk. Duraation is 22 minutes.
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Returns the first close-range images about Mars.
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Launced, becoming the first craft to impact Venus on March 1, 1966.
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Launched carrying Frank Borman and James A. Lovell, Jr., making 206 orbits around Earth and providing a trip to the moon possible.
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American astronauts Walter Schirra, Jr. and Thomas Staffored in Gemini 6 make the first space rendezvous with Gemini 7.
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The first spacecraft to soft-land on the moon.
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Impacts on Venus, the first spacecraft to reach another planet. It fails to return data.
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The first spacecraft to orbit the moon.
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The first U.S. spacecraft to soft-land on the Moon.
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Enters moon orbit and takes the first picture of the Earth from the distance of the moon.
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Launched carrying Vladimir M. Komarov. On April 24, it crashed, killing Komarov, the first spaceflight fatality.
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Sends a descent capsule into the VEnusian atmosphere, returning data about its composition.
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Launched, the first spacecraft to orbit the Moon and return.
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The first manned Apollo mission with Walter M. Schirra, Jr., Donn F. Eisele, and Walter Cunningham. It orbited the earth once.
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Launched with Frank Borman, James A. Lovell, Jr., and William A. Anders, the first Apollo to use the Saturn V rocket, and the first manned spacecraft to orbit the Moon, making 10 orbits on its 6-day mission.
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Perform the first Soviet spaceship docking, transferring Cosmonauts between vehicles.
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Neil Armstron and Edwin Aldrin, Jr. make the first manned soft landing on the Moon, and the first moonwalk.
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Returns high-resolution images of the Martian surface, concentrating on the equitorial region.
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Returns high-resolution images of the Martian surface, concentrating on the southern hemisphere.
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Launched, suffering an explosion in its SM oxygen tanks. Its Moon landing is aborted, and the crew, James A. Lovell, Jr., John L. Swigert, Jr., and Fred W. Haise, Jr., return safely.
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Launched, conducting the first successful return of lunar soil samples by an automatic spacecraft.
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Lands on the moon, with the first automatic robot, Lunokhod 1. Driven by a five-man team on earth, traveled over surface for 11 days,
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The first probe to soft-land on Venus, transmitting for 23 minutes.
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Moon mission is launched by the U.S. with the legendary Alan Shepard, along with Stuart Roosa and Edgar Mitchell on board. The land in the planned Apollo 13 site, the Fra Mauro highlands, which they explore with the help of a two-wheeled cart that permits the transport of a significantly greater quantity of lunar material that previous missions. Shepard becomes the first man to hit a golf ball on the moon.
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Space station is launched by the U.S.S.R. It remains in orbit until May 28, 1973.
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The first spacecraft to survey Mars from orbit.
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Carried Cosmonauts G.T. Dobrovolsky, V.N. Volkov, and V.I. Patsayev to Salyut 1, the first manned occupancy or an orbital station. However, on June 29, the Cosmonauts died upon Soyuz 11's reentry.
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Astronauts David Scott and James Irwin drive the first moon rover. The next year, Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt drives a similar rover.
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The first spacecraft to orbit another planet, Mars. Over the next year, it mapes 100% of the Martian surface.
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Launched on an Atlas/Centaur/TE364-4 towards Jupiter by the U.S., designed to familiarize alien life with humans. It returns the first close-up images of Jupiter in 1973.
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The first man-made object to travel through the asteroid belt.
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Scientist designate Cignus X-1 as the first probable black hole.
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Launched on an Atlas/Centaur/ TE364-4, flying past Jupiter in 1974, and Saturn in 1979, where it discovers new rings.
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Launched by the U.S., and maintained by three crews.
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First crew to Skylab, Skylab 2, are launched, repairing damage incurred to Skylab during its launch.
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Launched on the first dual-planet mission. Over the next year, it returned photographs of Venus and Mercury.
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NASA launches the first Synchronous Meterological Satellite, SMS-1.
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Soviet's first millitary space station is launched. It remains in orbit until January 1975.
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Civilian space station is launched. It remains in orbit until Feburary 2, 1977.
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American Apollo 18 and Soviet Soyuz 19 dock, the first international spacecraft rendezvous.
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Send the first pictures of the VEnusian surface to Earth.
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Soviet military space station is launched, remaining in orbit until August 8, 1977.
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Pictures of hte Martian surface are taken by Viking 12, the first U.S. attempt to soft land a spacecraft on another planet.
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Lands on Mars on the Plain of Utopia where it discovered water frost.
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Leave Earth to meet with Jupiter in 1979 and Saturn in 1980.
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Space station is launched. Its crews include members from Czechoslovakia, Poland, GDR, Bulgaria, Hungary, Vietnam, Cuba, Mongolia, and Romania.
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The Einstein Ovservatory begins its 30-day mission.
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Two Pioneer spacecraft reach Venus. One drops four probes into the atmosphere, while the other maps the surface.
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Reaches Saturn, flying to within 13,000 miles and taking the first close-up photographs.
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The first manned mission of the Space Transportation System, STS-1, is launched.
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The European Space Agency launches its third Ariane rocket.
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The ESA launches a fourth Ariane rocket.
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Lands on Venuys, and provides the first Venusian soil analysis.
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Space station is launched.
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Soviet Cosmonauts Anatoly N. Berezovoi and Valentin V. Lebedev are lauinched to rendevous with Salyut 7, the first team to inhabit the space station. They return to Earth in Soyuz-T 7, setting a duration record of 211 days.
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Completes it flyby of Saturn.
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The space shuttle's fifth mission. its first operational one, begins, deploying two satellites. Crew: Vance Brand, Robert Overmyer, Joseph Allen, and William Lenoir.
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Finds new comets, asteroids, galaxies, and a dust ring around the star Vega that may be new planets.
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The space shuttle lifts off for its first mission, STS-6, and has the first American space walk in nine years. Crew: Paul Weitz, Karol Bobko, Donald Peterson, and Story Musgrave.
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Sally K. Ride is the first U.S. woman to travel in spave on Challenger mission STS-7.
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Returns the first high-resolution images of the Venus polar area, and compiled a thermal map of most of the northern hemisphere.
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The space shuttle carries the ESA Spacelab-1 into orbit, STS-9. Its crew includes Ulf Merbold, A German, and first ESA member in space.
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Bruce McCandless takes the first untethered space walk using MMU from the space shuttle, STS-41B.
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Launched, carrying Svetlana Savitskaya, who became the first woman to walk in space.
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The third space shuttle, Discovery, lifts off on it's maiden voyage, STS-41D. Crew: Henry W. Hartsfield, Michael L. Coats, Richard Mullane. Steven Hawley, Judith A. Resnik, and Charles D. Walker.
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Cosmonauts L.D. Kizim, V.A. Solovyoz, and O.Y. Atkov set a 237-day record in space. They arrive at Slyut 7 in Soyuz-T 10 and depart in Soyuz-T 11.
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Launch of space shuttle, mission STS-41G, carrying the first crew with two women aboard - Sally Ride and Katherine Sullivan. Sullivan becomes the first American woman to walk in space.
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Soviet/International Vega 1 & 2 are launghed, dropping probes into Venus' atmosphere before continuing to Halley's Comet.
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The probe is launched by Japan's Institute of Space and Aeronautical Science, becoming the first interplanetary probe as it rendevous with Halley's Comet.
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Carries the ESA Spacelab-3 into orbit, STS-51B.
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The ESA launches the spacecraft from an Ariane rocket. It encounters Halley's Comet in 1986, and Comet P/Grigg-Skjellerup in 1992.
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The first joint German/ESA mission is flown. Its crew consists of two German DARA astronauts and Danish Wubbo Ockels of the ESA.
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The fourth space shuttle Atlantis takes off on its first mission, STS-51J. Crew: Karol J. Bobko, Ronald J. Grabe, Robert A. Sterwart. David C. Hilmers, and William A. Pailes.
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Flies past Uranus.
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The space shuttle explodes shortly after liftoff of mission STS-51L.
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The core unit of Soviet space station Mir is launched.
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Spacecraft from the U.S.S.R., Japan, and Western Europe fly by Halley's Comet on it's 30th recorded appearance.
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Astronomers discover an invisible gravity source that splits a quasar's light.
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Astronomers find that our galaxy is smaller than they thought and the Sun is 23,000 light-years from it's center.
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Blazes into view.
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Returns from space station Mir, having arrived there from Soyuz-TM 2, and sets a space endurance record of 326 days.
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Space Shuttle Atlantis is launched, STS-30, deploying the spacecraft Magellan.
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Soviet/Internation Phobos 2 launched, which robits Mars to study its surface, stmosphere, and magnetic field.
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U.S. launches the Galileo spacecraft from Shuttle Atlantis flight STS-34, which took the infrared images of Venus, and images of the asteroid Ida, before continuing to Jupiter.
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Deployed from a B-52 bomber and launched the Pegsat satellite in the first demonstration of the Pegasus launch vehicle.
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Space Shuttle Discovery launches on STS-31, deploying the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) astronomical observatory.
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U.S. spacecraft arrives at Venus where, for the enxt year, it took radar images of the surface.
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Space Shuttle Discovery launches the Ulysses spacecraft with two upper stages, on mission STS-41. Ulysses flies toward Jupiter, to be slingshot towards the sun, to obtain data from high solar latitudes.
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Falls from orbit and burns up over Argentina.
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Space Shuttle Atlantis carries the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory into orbit. This new space telescope, built by NASA, was the first to provide an all-sky continuous survey in the gamma-ray and X-ray spectra.
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Shuttle Columbia carries the Spacelab SLS-1 into orbit to conduct investigations into the effects of weightlessness on humans, STS-40.
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Flies around Jupiter on its way to the sun.
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Lifts off on its first mission, STS-49, repairing the Intelesat VI satellite. Cres: Daniel C. Brandenstein, Kevin P. Chilton, Richard J. Hieb, Bruce E. Melnick, Pierre J. Thout, Kathryn C. Thornton, and Thomas D. Akers.
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Lifts off, the first American probe to Mars in 17 years since Viking 2. This probe is intended as an orbital mapper to study the red planet's atmosphere, surface, and geological make-up. The spacecraft functions well during its cruise to Mars, then all contact was lonst on August 21, 1993, three days before orbital insertion.
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Launches on STS-61, making the first on-orbit service of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST).
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A DOD satellite that performs a lunar mapping mission using advanced ballistic missile defense technologies. It suffers a malfunction on May 10, 1994, ending its mission.
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A Russian Cosmonaut, Sergei Krikalev, flies on board the U.S. space shuttle Discovery for the first time, STS-60.
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Reaches a maximum Southern latitude of 80.2 degrees at the sun, proceeding towards the Northern latitudes, maintaining an orbital period of six years.
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Enters the atmosphere of Venus, burning up following the completion of its mapping mission.
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Passes within 65,000 miles of Earth.
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Maneuvers to within 37 feet of Russian space station Mir in preperation for a shuttle-Mir docking, STS-63. This is the first shuttle mission to be flown by a female pilot.
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Cosmonaut Valeriy Polyakov returns to Earth after a 438-day mission aboard russian space station Mir, setting a new space endurance record.
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Rendezvous with Russian space station, Mir, during a ten-day mission on STS-71. Cosmonauts are transferred to and from Atlantis, and Astronaut Norman Thagard returns from Mir, having arrived on Soyuz-TM 21, and making a new American space record of 115 days.
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Ceases making scientific observations, its power source nearly depleted.
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Lifts off on mission STS-74, making the second docking with Russian space station Mir. It delivers two solar arrays and a docking module for fuuture Shuttle dockings.
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Arrives at Jupiter, performing an orbit while dropping a probe into the atmosphere and putting a satellite into orbit, which will spend the next two years orbiting the planet.
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Thomas Reiter becomes the first European Space Agency astronaut to make two spacewalks, both from the Russian Mir station. His previous spacewalk was on October 21, 1995 and lasted 5 hours and 11 minutes.
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NASA launches the first in the Discovery series of spacecraft, the Near-Earth Asteroid Rendezvous, NEAR, spacecraft aboard a Delta II-7925-8 rocket.
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Lifts off on STS-76 performing the third docking with Space Station Mir. Astronaut Shannon Lucide was left on Mir, becoming the first female Astronaut to crew a Space Station.
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Touches down after mission STS-79. It brings back Shannon Lucid, who becomes the longest US astronaut in space and the longest female astronaut in space.
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Lifts off on its 21st space flight, setting a new shuttle in-space endurance record of almost 18 days. This flight carries Story Musgrave, the oldest man at 61 years of age.
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Lifts off for the fifth docking with the Mir space station and Jerry Linenger replaces John Blaha as the American crew member.
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Lifts off to dock with the Mir space station. New Russion crew members, Vasily Tsibliyev and Alexander Lazutkin, relieve Russians Korzun and Kaleri for the beginnings of an eventful and difficult tour of duty. Before the resident crew leaves, a fierce fire breaks out on board which is contained and put out before serious damage is done. After the old crew leaves, an attept to re-dock with the Progress supply freighter fails, with the freighter just missing collision with Mir.
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Lifts off on the second maintenance mission for the Hubble Space Telescope, installing a new spectrograph, infrared camera, new guidance sensors, a new computer and data recorder, and repairing the telescope
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After 25 years of operation, routine telemetry and ground control is terminated. The probe, at that moment, is 6.7 billion miles from Earth, traveling at 28,000 miles per hour. In two million years, it will reach the red giant Aldeberan in the constellation of Taurus.
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Lifts off for the shortest shuttle flight in 12 years, four days. The flight is cut short due to a failure of one of the spacecraft's three fuel cells.
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Performs its sixth docking with Mir. Jerry Linenger is relieved by Michael Foale as the American crewmember on Mir. Atlantis returned to Earth on May 24th and Mir continued with its troubles. On June 24th, the cfrew attempts a test with a new docking system to dock with a Progress freighter. The failure of the new system results in the collision of the freighter into Mir, causing a serious air leak and damage to the electrical power of the station.
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Probe passes the asteroid Mathilde on its way to meeting up with 433 Eros.
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Lifts off again to complete the flight aborted in April. The shuttle is outfitted with Spacelab, set up as a microgravity science labroatory with 33 different experiments that fill the cargo bay.
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The first probe to successfully land on Mars since Viking 2 in 1976. It is also the first planetary probe to include a seperate roving robot probe, Sojourner, since the Soviet Union's Luna 21 in 1973.
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Arrives at Mir with a relief crew. The fresh Russian crew, along with Michael Foale, undertake seven internal and external spacewalk missions over a six month period in order to repair the crippled station. During the repairs, the station has a near collision with an abandoned satellite, MSTI 2, which speeds past to within 500 meters of Mir.
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Lifts off for a 12-day mission to deploy and retrieve the Crista-Spas 2 satellite, which studied the Earth's middle atmosphere. THis flight also tested various infrared and ultraviolet instrumentation and tested the Japanese robot-arm to be used for the International Space Station.
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Arrives at Mars and begins the process of adjusting its highly elliptical orbit into a circular one using aerobraking - friction with the top of the Martian atmosphere to slow the craft down. Taking about 2,000 images of the planet, this probe shows the entire life of a dust storm, evidence of Martian streams, ponds, oceans, and undgerground water drainage systems.
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Performs its seventh docking with Mir to support the repair and upgrade process and bringing additional experiments for the space station.
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Launch of the double probe Cassini/Huygens aimed at Saturn. This is probably the most ambitious and complex unmanned planetary project ever attempted, costing more than $2.5 billion and involving 17 nations and hundreds of scientists from the U.S. and Europe. It carries a sophisticated camera package and 11 other instruments aimed at performing 19 experiments on the ringed planet. It will arrive at Saturn in 2004, will orbit Saturn up to 60 times, sending back close-up photos of Saturns rings.
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Lifts off with three American astronauts, one Japanese, and the first Ukranian astronaut, Leonid Kadenyuk. This mission, mostly dedicated to science and the testing of new space technologies, releases one free-flying satellite.
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The first NASA mission to the Moon in 25 years, and the first dedicated to lunar research since Apollo 17 in 1972. The spacecraft is placed in lunar orbit to make a careful spectroscopic analysis of the entire lunar surface including its North and South poles, and soon confirms what the Department of Defense Clementines mission had found in 1994 - that trapped within some craters at the Moon's two poles is about 6.6 trillion tons of permanently frozen ice water.
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Lifts off the rendezvous with Mir, the eight U.S. docking with the Russian space station and the first by a shuttle other than Atlantis.
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The four satellites are the first in Globalstar's planned 44-satellite constellation of medium-Earth-orbit, 900 miles altitude, communications satellites for providing voice and data links worldwide from both remote and home telephones. This system is planned as a direct sompetitor to Iridium's cluster, which began launching in May of 1997.
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Lifts off on a 16-day mission, its 25th. THe mission is dedicated to the study of the effects of weightlessness on the human neurological system, with the astronauts serving as both researchers and experimental subjects.
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Lifts off on a 10-day mission, its 24th and the last shuttle docking with Mir.
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Japan launches the probe to Mars, the first planetary mission by a country other than the U.S. or the Soviet Union/Russia. Using a combination of lunar gravity, Earth gravity, and rocket burns, Nozomi is scheduled to arrive at Mars in December 2003.
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Launched by the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office, the Space Technology EXperiement, STEX, satellite tests 29 new spacecraft designs, including an almost four-mile-long tether, advanced solar panels and an ion engine test.
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Launched by NASA, it is a technology test spacecraft which evalutes a dozen advanced spacecraft engineering designs from mirror-enhanced solar panels to the first use of an ion engine to leave Earth orbit and rendezvous with the asteroid Braille.
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Lifts off with John Glenn aboard, first American to orbit Earth, and at 77, the oldest man to fly in space. The flight is the last purely scientific shuttle flight focusing on astronomy, life sciences, and materials. One satellite is deployed, one is released and retrieved. Most subsequent shuttle flights are ferry and constructrion flights for the International Space Station.
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The first component of the International Space Station, it is launched on a Russian rocket. This Russion built, U.S. financed module provides communications, electrical power, and attitude control for the station until the arrival of the third modul, Zvezda in July 2000.
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Lifts off on its thirteenth space flight, with the International Space Station's second module, Unity. This module provides the docking ports and connections for every other docked module.
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Launched by Nasa with the objective of studying Martian weather. The probe is lost as it approaches Mars on September 23, 1999, dues to an error in propulsion software, using English instead of metric unites. The probe passes too close to Mars and burns up in the atmosphere.
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Space probe lifes to within 2,400 miles of the asteroid 433 Eros, taking 222 photographs of nearly two-thirds of its surface. A software problem prevents the spacecraft from going into orbit around the asteroid, but a secfond engine burn on January 2, 1999, brings the spacecraft back to Eros in Feburary of 2000.
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Lifts off on its ill-fated mission to Mars. This NASA probe is to land within about 600 miles of the Martian South Pole, along with dropping two-surface penetrating darts. Contact with the probe is lost on December 3, 1999 as it is descending through the Martian atmosphere and is never heard from again. the first failure of a U.S. planetary soft landing in 30 years.
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Lifts off for a rendezvous with the Comet WIld-2 in January of 2004.
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Lifts off for the Mir space station. This is scheduled to be the final mission to Mir, and when the crew of TM29 departs Mir in August of 1999, they leave the space station empty for the first time in almost exactly 10 years.
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Lifts off for the International Space Station. They bring supplies and perform a spacewalk of nearly eight hours to install two exterior cranes along with a variety of tools and equipment for future astronaut use. They deploy the satellite Starshine for studying atmospheric density changes.
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Lifts off carerying the Chandra X-Ray Observatory into orbit.
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Flies to within 16 miles of the asteroid Braille and continues on its course to rendezvous with COmet Wilson-Harrington in January 2001.
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The first unmanned test of their manned capsule.
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Lifts off for the third maintenance mnission to the Hubble Space Telescope. They perform three space walks, installing six new gyroscopes, a new guidance sensor, a new computer, a voltage/temperature kit for the spacecraft's batteries, a new transmitter, a new solid state recorder and thermal insulation blankets.
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Safely completes its encounter with Jupiter's ice moon, Europe, at an altitude of 343 km. Later in the year, on May 30, Galileo flies by Jupiter's largest moon Ganymede at an altitude of 808 km.
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Lifts off to carry out the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission, cosponsored by NASA and the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, A large radar antenna in the payload bay and a smaller element deployued on a 60-meter boom work together in the synthetic-aperture mode to produce the effect of a much larger antenna. The mission produces a three-dimensional map of about 80% of the world's landmass.
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Settles into orbit around the asteroid 433 Eros, producing a series of stunning close-up images. Ground controllers start tightening its orbit for an eventual soft impact with the tumbling, potato-shaped asteroid.
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Lifts off on a return mission to Mir, reversing Russia's actions of the previous year to shut the space station down. THe idea is to re-open the soace station for commercial operations, including a Mir version of the Survivor TV show. The cosmonauts remain until mid-June, and two Progress freighters are flown up, one in April, one in October, before financial support dissapears and the venture falls through.
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Lifts off for the International Space Station for maintenance on the crane and a faulty antenna, installation of a Russian boom arm, handrails, and upgrades to the ventilation system, and delivery of new batteries, supplies, and equipment.
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The service module for the Internation Space Station, ISS, is launched from Russia on a Proton rocket. THe automated docking of this until with the first linked pair of modules already in orbit, Zarya and Unity, allows the U.S. to start a series of space shuttle launches to add American-built components which will be followed by labratory modeules from Europe and Japan. Zvezda will act as the control center and living quarters for the intial space station crews.
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Lifts off on a 12-day mission to outfit the ISS, completing the installation of the Zvezda module.
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Lifts off on a 14-day mission to install the Z1 segment, the first piece of the space station truss and a third docking port, PMA-3, for the Unity adapter. THey also test the new 'SAFER' spacesuit backpack propulsion units.
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Launched on a Soyuz transport to become the first crew of the ISS.
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Lifts off on a 12-day mission to the ISS. They install the first set of ISS's solar panels and radiators for removing heat.
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The first launch of the "true' milenium is Chinese, with the second test flight of the manned Shenshou spaceship, reported to be carrying a monkey, a dog, and a rabbit.
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Lifts off for the ISS, carrying the U.S.'s Destiny labratory module. In three psace wsalks, the astronauts install Destiny, a grappler for the station's robotic arm, and radio antenna.
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Soft impacts on the asteroid 433 Eros at 2 m/s. Signals continue to be recieved from the probe hours after the landing, confirming its survival.
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Launched on a 14-day ISS construction mission. In two spacewalks, the astronauts install new equipment including the Leonardo logisitics module, built by the Italian Space Agency, to move racks of experimental equipment to the ISS, docking to the station as the equipment is used & transferred, then carrying equipment back in the shuttle after use.
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Fifteen years after its first launch, and after nearly 10 years of continuous occupation by astronauts, the Mir space station is de-orbited, breaking up in the atmosphere and impacting in the Pacific Ocean.
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Launched on a trajectory for Mars orbit to be achieved in October, with a mission similar to that of the Mars Climate Orbiter launched December 1998. Mars Odessey successfully enters Mars orbit on October 24th.
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Lifts off for the ISS with the Leonardo labratory module and SimpleSat, an experiment low-cost astronomical telescope.
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Lifts off for the ISS on a construction mission. The crew will install the mobile robot arm on the station, Canadarm 2, and supple the Destiny labratory module with new experiments using the Rafaello logistic module.
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Lifts off for the ISS with the first space tourist, buisness executive Dennis Tito, who pays the Russians $20 million for the ride.
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NASA's Microwave Anisotropy Probe is launched on a trajectory for a gravity boost past the moon to a position 1.5 billion km outside Earth's orbit. From that position, it is to measure cosmic background radiation from the dark exragalactic sky.
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Lifts off in the pre-dawn darkness for the ISS with the Joint Airlock which will enable space walks to be performed directly from the space station itself.
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Successfully completes its flyby of comet 19P/Borrelly.
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Completes another flyby of Jupiter's moon Io, passing only 181 km from Io's south polar region.
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Launched carrying the Raffaello logistics module back to the ISS with new supplies.
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Disintergrates on reentry, killing seven.
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China's first manned space mission is a success.
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The first privately built craft to enter space.
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Foam shreds during Discovery launch, NASA postpones future flights.
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Launches, only the second by a shuttle since Columbia.