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2008 in spaceflight

none

2008 in spaceflight

none

FieldValue
year2008
imageFalcon 1 Flight 4 liftoff.jpg
captionFirst successful flight of a SpaceX Falcon 1
first15 January
last25 December
total69
success66
failed2
partial1
catalogued67
maidensAriane 5ES
Long March 3C
PSLV-XL
Safir
Zenit-3SLB
retiredH-IIA 2024
orbital7
totalcrew37
firstsat
firsttrav

Long March 3C PSLV-XL Safir Zenit-3SLB

The year 2008 contained several significant events in spaceflight, including the first flyby of Mercury by a spacecraft since 1975, the discovery of water ice on Mars by the Phoenix spacecraft, which landed in May, the first Chinese spacewalk in September, the launch of the first Indian Lunar probe in October, and the first successful flight of a privately developed orbital launch vehicle by SpaceX's Falcon 1.

Overview

The internationally accepted definition of a spaceflight is any flight which crosses the Kármán line, 100 kilometres above sea level. The first recorded spaceflight launch of the year occurred on 11 January, when a Black Brant was launched on a suborbital trajectory from White Sands, with the LIDOS ultraviolet astronomy payload. This was followed by the first orbital launch of the year on 15 January, by a Sea Launch Zenit-3SL, with the Thuraya 3 communications satellite. The launch marked the return to flight for Sea Launch following the explosion of a Zenit-3SL on the launch pad the previous January during an attempt to launch the NSS-8 satellite.

Five carrier rockets made their maiden flights in 2008; the Ariane 5ES, Long March 3C, Zenit-3SLB, PSLV-XL, and the operational version of the Falcon 1, with an uprated Merlin-1C engine. These were all derived from existing systems. The Blue Sparrow and Sejjil missiles also conducted their maiden flights, and the ATK Launch Vehicle made its only flight, but was destroyed by range safety after it went off course. In November, the baseline Proton-M was retired in favour of the Enhanced variant, first launched in 2007.

The first Vietnamese and Venezuelan satellites, Vinasat-1 and Venesat-1 respectively, were launched in 2008, while a failed Iranian launch was reported to have been that country's first indigenous orbital launch attempt. In September, SpaceX conducted the first successful orbital launch of a privately developed and funded liquid-fuelled carrier rocket, when the fourth Falcon 1 launched RatSat, following previous failures in 2006, 2007, and August.

Space exploration

The discovery of water ice on Mars

India launched its first Lunar probe, Chandraayan-1, on 22 October, with the spacecraft entering selenocentric orbit on 8 November. On 16 November, the Moon Impact Probe was released, and crashed into the Lunar surface. Although no other spacecraft were launched beyond geocentric orbit in 2008, several significant events occurred in interplanetary flights which had been launched in previous years. MESSENGER conducted flybys of Mercury in January and October, the first spacecraft to do so since Mariner 10 in 1975. Cassini continued to make flybys of the moons of Saturn, including several close passes of Enceladus, one at a distance of 25 kilometres. In September Rosetta flew past the asteroid 2867 Šteins. On 25 May, the Phoenix spacecraft landed in the Green Valley on Mars, where it discovered water ice. Phoenix exceeded its design life of 90 days, finally failing on 10 November. The Ulysses spacecraft, launched in 1990, was also retired in 2008.

Crewed spaceflight

Seven crewed flights were launched in 2008, one by China, two by Russia and four by the United States. In April, Yi So-yeon became the first South Korean to fly in space, aboard Soyuz TMA-12. On the same flight, Sergey Volkov became the first second-generation cosmonaut. Yi returned to Earth aboard Soyuz TMA-11, which nearly ended in disaster following a separation failure between the descent and service modules, resulting in a ballistic reentry. In September, China conducted its third crewed mission, Shenzhou 7, from which Zhai Zhigang and Liu Boming conducted the first Chinese spacewalk. Soyuz TMA-13, launched in October, was the hundredth flight of the Soyuz programme to carry a crew at some point in its mission.

Assembly of the International Space Station continued, with the delivery of the Columbus module by on mission STS-122 in February. March saw the launch of the Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle, an uncrewed European spacecraft which was used to resupply the space station. Also in March, Space Shuttle launched on STS-123 with the first component of the Japanese Experiment Module, the Experiment Logistics Module. STS-123 marked the final flight of the Spacelab programme, with a SpaceLab pallet used to carry the Canadian-built Dextre RMS extension. The second JEM component, the main pressurised module, was launched by STS-124, flown by in May. In November, Endeavour launched on the STS-126 logistics flight, with the Leonardo MPLM.

Launch failures

On 14 March, a Proton-M with a Briz-M upper stage launched AMC-14. Several hours later, on 15 March, the Briz-M engine cut off prematurely during a burn, leaving the satellite in a medium Earth orbit. Following a small legal dispute, the satellite was sold, and raised to a geosynchronous orbit by its manoeuvring thrusters, at the expense of a large amount of its fuel and hence operational life.

On 3 August, SpaceX launched the third Falcon 1. Due to residual thrust caused by the upgraded Merlin-1C engine which was being flown for the first time, the first stage recontacted the second during staging, resulting in the rocket failing to reach orbit. The Trailblazer, PreSat and NanoSail-D satellites were lost in the failure, as was a space burial capsule, containing the remains of several hundred people, including astronaut Gordon Cooper, actor James Doohan, writer and director John Meredyth Lucas and Apollo mission planner Mareta West.

On 16 August, Iran launched a Safir, which though officially successful, was reported to have failed due to a second stage malfunction. The purpose of this launch is in doubt, as before the launch it was claimed that it would place the Omid into orbit, whilst following the launch, it was reported that a boilerplate payload had been launched. Other reports indicated that the launch was only a suborbital test of the rocket. If this was an orbital launch attempt, it was the first Iranian attempt to launch a satellite.

On 22 August, the inaugural launch of the Alliant Techsystems ALV X-1 was terminated 27 seconds after launch from Wallops Flight Facility when it veered off course. Both hypersonic physics experiments on board were destroyed.

Summary of launches

The ATK Launch Vehicle, launched on a suborbital flight in August

In total, sixty nine orbital launches were made in 2008, with sixty seven reaching orbit, and two outright failures if the Iranian launch in August is counted. This is an increase of one orbital launch attempt on 2007, with two more launches reaching orbit, which continues a trend of increasing launch rates seen since 2006. The final launch of the year was conducted on 25 December, by a Proton-M with three GLONASS navigation satellites for the Russian government.

Launch of an SM-3 missile to destroy USA-193

Suborbital spaceflight in 2008 saw a number of sounding rocket and missile launches. On 21 February, a RIM-161 Standard Missile 3 was used as an anti-satellite weapon to destroy the USA-193 satellite. USA-193 was a US spy satellite which had failed immediately after launch in 2006.

By country

China conducted twelve orbital launches of a planned fifteen. Europe had intended to conduct seven launches of Ariane 5 rockets, and the maiden flight of the Vega rocket, however payload delays pushed one of the Arianes into 2009, and the Vega was delayed due to development issues. India had originally scheduled five to seven launches, however only three of these were conducted, mostly due to delays with the launch of Chandraayan-1. Japan scheduled three launches for 2008, of which one was launched; an H-IIA with WINDS in February. Russia and the former Soviet Union conducted twenty six launches, not including the international Sea and Land launch programmes, which conducted six. Fourteen launches were conducted by the United States, which had originally announced plans to launch many more, however technical issues with several rockets, particularly the Atlas V, Delta II and Falcon 1, caused a number of delays. The Atlas problems, combined with a series of delays to the launch of NRO L-26 on a Delta IV, resulted in just two of ten planned EELV launches being conducted. Two of six planned Space Shuttle launches were also delayed to 2009, one due to problems with External Tank delivery, and another due to a major systems failure on the Hubble Space Telescope, which it was to have serviced. Israel was not reported to have scheduled, or conducted an orbital launch attempt.

Orbital launches

January

|-

February

|- |d-date = 7 April |d-time = 11:50

|d-date = 20 February |d-time = 14:07:10

Technology

March

|- |[[File:European_Space_Agency_logo.svg|23px]] Ariane 5ES |d-date = 29 September |d-time = 13:31

Final flight of Spacelab programme, pallet used to transport Dextre |d-date = 27 March |d-time = 00:39:08 |d-span = 2 |d-span = inherit

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071011154442/http://roscosmos.ru/StartsMain.asp?ShowYear=2008 |archive-date = 11 October 2007 |url-status=dead }} Initial recovery attempted but abandoned due to legal issues. Later sold and recovery efforts restarted. Partial launch failure

April

|-

Docked on 10 April at 12:57 GMT |d-date = 24 October |d-time = 03:37

Heaviest satellite to be launched by an Atlas rocket.

|d-date = 28 November 2015

|[[File:European_Space_Agency_logo.svg|23px]] Ariane 5 ECA

Technology demonstration

RUBIN-8 intentionally remained attached to upper stage Technology demonstration |d-date = 13 November 2023

Reached incorrect orbit due to carrier rocket underperformance. Corrected by satellite through use of spare fuel, without affecting operational life.

May

|- |d-date = 8 September

|d-date = 14 June |d-time = 15:15

June

|-

|[[File:European_Space_Agency_logo.svg|23px]] Ariane 5 ECA

July

|-

|[[File:European_Space_Agency_logo.svg|23px]] Ariane 5 ECA

August

|-

|d-time = ~T+140 seconds |d-span = 4 |o-span = 4 |d-span = inherit |o-span = inherit |d-span = inherit |o-span = inherit |d-span = inherit |o-span = inherit

|[[File:European_Space_Agency_logo.svg|23px]] Ariane 5 ECA

|d-date = 16 August

September

|-

|d-date = 7 December |d-time = 08:48:47

Ban Xing deployed from Shenzhou on 27 September at 11:27 GMT, GC separated on 28 September at 08:48 to begin independent mission |d-date = 28 September |d-time = 09:37:40 |d-date = 30 October 2009 |d-date = 4 January 2010

October

|-

|d-date = 8 April 2009 |d-time = 07:16

|d-date = 14 November

November

|-

|d-date = 23 February 2009 |d-time = 16:15

|d-date = 30 November |d-time = 21:25:06 |d-span = 2 |d-span = inherit |d-date = 17 February 2010 |d-time = 17:31

ISS flight 31P |d-date = 8 February 2009 |d-time = 08:20

December

|-

|d-date = 2 September 2014

|[[File:European_Space_Agency_logo.svg|23px]] Ariane 5 ECA

|}

Suborbital launches

January-March

|- |d-time = 05:42 |d-date = 17 January |d-date = 18 January |d-date = 25 January |d-date = 31 January

|d-date = 4 February |d-date = 6 February |d-date = 7 February |d-time = 03:29 |d-date = 21 February |d-date = 26 February

|d-date = 23 March |d-date = 28 March

April-June

|- |d-date = 2 April |d-time = 17:08 |d-date = 15 April |d-date = 19 April

|d-date = 21 April

|d-time = 05:40 |d-time = 04:41 |d-date = 8 May |d-date = 8 May |d-date = 15 May |d-date = 22 May

|d-date = 23 May |d-date = 29 May

|d-date = 5 June |d-date = 13 June

|d-date = 13 June |d-date = 26 June

|d-date = 26 June |d-date = 30 June

July-September

|- |d-date = 7 July |d-date = 9 July

|d-date = 9 July

|d-date = 9 July

|d-date = 10 July

|d-date = 12 July

|d-date = 14 July |d-date = 18 July

|d-date = 1 August

|d-date = 2 August |d-date = 13 August |d-time = T+27 seconds |d-span = 2 |o-span = 2 |d-span = inherit |o-span = inherit

|d-date = 25 August

|d-date = 25 August

|d-date = 28 August

|d-date = 18 September

|d-time = 15:05 |d-date = 24 September

October-December

|- |d-date = 11 October |d-time = 07:50

|d-date = 12 October

|d-date = 12 October |d-time = 08:49 |d-date = 22 October

|d-date = 22 October

|d-date = 1 November

|d-date = 1 November |d-date = 1 November |d-date = 1 November |d-date = 5 November |d-date = 12 November |d-date = 12 November |d-date = 13 November |d-date = 14 November |d-date = 19 November

|d-date = 19 November |d-date = 26 November |d-date = 26 November |d-date = 28 November

|d-time = 10:45

|d-time = 20:29

|d-time = 20:29 |d-date = 23 December

|}

Deep Space Rendezvous

Date (GMT)SpacecraftEventRemarks
5 JanuaryCassini40th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1010 km
14 JanuaryMESSENGER1st flyby of MercuryClosest approach: 200 km at 19:04 GMT
22 FebruaryCassini41st flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1000 km
12 MarchCassini3rd flyby of EnceladusClosest approach: 52 km
25 MarchCassini42nd flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1000 km
12 MayCassini43rd flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1000 km
25 MayPhoenixLanding on MarsRegion D, Arctic area - Green Valley, near the Heimdal crater: . Touchdown at 23:38 GMT. Successful
28 MayCassini44th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1400 km
31 JulyCassini45th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1613 km
11 AugustCassini4th flyby of EnceladusClosest approach: 54 km
5 SeptemberRosettaFlyby of 2867 Šteins
6 OctoberMESSENGER2nd flyby of Mercury
9 OctoberCassini5th flyby of EnceladusClosest approach: 25 km
31 OctoberCassini6th flyby of EnceladusClosest approach: 200 km
3 NovemberCassini46th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1100 km
8 NovemberChandrayaan-1Injection into Selenocentric orbitPeriselene: 504 km, Aposelene: 7502 km
14 NovemberMIPLanding on the MoonLunar Impactor
19 NovemberCassini47th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 1023 km
5 DecemberCassini48th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 960 km
21 DecemberCassini49th flyby of TitanClosest approach: 970 km

:Distant, non-targeted flybys of Dione, Enceladus, Mimas, Tethys and Titan by Cassini occurred throughout the year.

EVAs

Start date/timeDurationEnd timeSpacecraftCrewFunctionRemarks
30 January
09:567 hours
10 minutes17:06Expedition 16
(ISS Quest)USAPeggy Whitson
USADaniel M. TaniReplace motor and bearing in solar array joint
url = http://www.spaceflightnow.com/shuttle/sts122/status2.htmltitle = STS-122 Mission Status Centerfirst=Justinlast=Raypublisher = Spaceflight Nowdate = 2008-02-11access-date = 2008-03-21}}7 hours
58 minutes22:11STS-122
(ISS Quest)USARex J. Walheim
USAStanley G. LoveInstall Power Data Grapple Fixture on ColumbusOriginally to have been conducted by Walheim and Hans Schlegel, Love replaced Schlegel on medical grounds.
13 February
14:276 hours
45 minutes21:12STS-122
(ISS Quest)USARex J. Walheim
GERHans SchlegelReplace depleted nitrogen tank
15 February
12:077 hours
25 minutes20:32STS-122
(ISS Quest)USARex J. Walheim
USAStanley G. LoveInstall experiments on Columbus, load failed gyroscope onto Shuttle for return to Earth
14 March
01:187 hours
1 minute08:19STS-123
(ISS Quest)USARichard M. Linnehan
USAGarrett ReismanInstall Kibo ELM-PS and start Dextre assembly
url = http://www.spaceflightnow.com/shuttle/sts123/status2.htmltitle = STS-123 - Mission Status Centerfirst=Justinlast=Raypublisher = Spaceflight Nowdate = 2008-03-24access-date = 2008-03-26}}7 hours
8 minutes16 March
06:57STS-123
(ISS Quest)USARichard M. Linnehan
USAMichael ForemanDextre assembly
17 March
22:526 hours
53 minutes18 March
05:44STS-123
(ISS Quest)USARichard M. Linnehan
USARobert L. BehnkenDextre assembly, install MISSE-6 experiment, and store spare parts outside the ISSMISSE installation failed
20 March
22:046 hours
24 minutes21 March
04:08STS-123
(ISS Quest)USARobert L. Behnken
USAMichael ForemanTest heat shield repair techniques
22 March
20:346 hours
2 minutes23 March
02:36STS-123
(ISS Quest)USARobert L. Behnken
USAMichael ForemanStore OBSS on ISS, retry MISSE-6 installation
url=http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2008/06/kibo-joins-the-iss-during-eva-1-sarj-issue-no-focused-inspection/title=Kibo joins the ISS during EVA-1, SARJ issue - No Focused Inspectionlast=Berginfirst=Chrisdate=2008-06-03publisher=NASASpaceflight.comaccess-date=2008-06-13}}6 hours
48 minutes23:10STS-124
(ISS Quest)USAMike Fossum
USARon GaranInstall JEM Pressurised Module, Inspect SARJ, retrieve OBSS.
5 June
15:047 hours
11 minutes22:15STS-124
(ISS Quest)USAMike Fossum
USARon Garanurl=http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2008/06/sts-124-eva-2-aids-kibosarj-obss-issue-evaluated/title=STS-124: EVA-2 aids Kibo/SARJ - OBSS issue evaluatedlast=Berginfirst=Chrisdate=2008-06-05publisher=NASASpaceflight.comaccess-date=2008-06-13}}
8 June
13:556 hours
33 minutes20:28STS-124
(ISS Quest)USAMike Fossum
USARon Garanurl=http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2008/06/eva-3-checks-sarj-relocates-nta-endeavour-apu-changeout/title=EVA-3 checks SARJ, relocates NTA - Endeavour APU changeoutlast=Berginfirst=Chrisdate=2008-06-05publisher=NASASpaceflight.comaccess-date=2008-06-13}}
url=http://www.spaceflightnow.com/station/exp17/status.htmlpublisher=Spaceflight Nowlast=Rayfirst=Justintitle=Mission Status Centerdate=2008-07-10access-date=2008-07-10}}6 hours
18 minutes11 July
01:06Expedition 17
(ISS Pirs)RUSSergei Volkov
RUSOleg KononenkoRemove pyrotechnic bolt from Soyuz TMA-12 for inspection.
15 July
17:085 hours
54 minutes23:02Expedition 17
(ISS Pirs)RUSSergei Volkov
RUSOleg KononenkoInstall docking targeting equipment, rotate exposed experiments
27 September
08:3822 minutes09:00Shenzhou 7PRCZhai Zhigang (full)
PRCLiu Boming (stand-up)Test spacesuit, collect experimentFirst Chinese EVA
18 November
18:096 hours
52 minutes19 November
01:01STS-126
(ISS Quest)USAHeidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper
USAStephen G. BowenTransferred an empty nitrogen tank assembly from ESP3 to the shuttle's cargo bay, transferred a new flex hose rotary coupler to ESP3 for future use, removed an insulation cover on the Kibo Exposed Facility berthing mechanism, began cleaning and lubrication of the starboard SARJ, and replacement of its 11 trundle bearing assemblies.
20 November
17:586 hours
45 minutes21 November
00:43STS-126
(ISS Quest)USAHeidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper
USARobert S. KimbroughRelocated the two CETA carts from the starboard side of the Mobile Transporter to the port side, lubricated the station robotic arm's latching end effector A snare bearings, continued cleaning and lubrication of the starboard SARJConducted on tenth anniversary of the launch of the ISS
22 November
18:016 hours
57 minutes23 November
00:58STS-126
(ISS Quest)USAHeidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper
USAStephen G. BowenCompleted cleaning and lubrication of all but one of the trundle bearing assemblies (TBA) on the starboard SARJ.
24 November
18:246 hours
7 minutes25 November
00:31STS-126
(ISS Quest)USAStephen G. Bowen
USARobert S. KimbroughCompleted replacement of trundle bearing assemblies on starboard SARJ, lubricated the port SARJ, installed a video camera, re-installed insulation covers on the Kibo External Facility berthing mechanism, performed Kibo robotic arm grounding tab maintenance, installed spacewalk handrails on Kibo, installed Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) antennae on Kibo, photographed radiators, and photographed trailing umbilical system cables.
23 December
00:515 hours
38 minutes06:29Expedition 18
(ISS Pirs)USAMichael Fincke
RUSYuri Lonchakovurl=http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2008/12/iss-spacewalk-completed-sarj-results-show-promise/title=ISS Spacewalk completed - SARJ results show promise following STS-126 worklast=Berginfirst=Chrisdate=2008-12-23publisher=NASASpaceflight.comaccess-date=2008-12-23archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081227130224/http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2008/12/iss-spacewalk-completed-sarj-results-show-promise/archive-date= 27 December 2008url-status=live}}EXPOSE-R installation failed

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. | [ {"value":240, "color":"#a52a2a", "label": "Russia: 24 (34.78%)"}, {"value":150, "color":"#484785", "label": "United States: 15 (21.74%)"}, {"value":110, "color":"#ff0000", "label": "China: 11 (15.94%)"}, {"value":80, "color":"#ffd700", "label": "Ukraine: 8 (11.59%)"}, {"value":60, "color":"#318ce7", "label": "France: 6 (8.70%)"}, {"value":30, "color":"#ff9933", "label": "India: 3 (4.35%)"}, {"value":10, "color":"#ffffff", "label": "Japan: 1 (1.45%)"}, {"value":10, "color":"#239f40", "label": "Iran: 1 (1.45%)"}, ]

CountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial
failuresstyle="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"style="text-align:left;"World
111100
6600
3201
1010
1100
242301
8800
151410

By rocket

By family

FamilyCountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Ariane6600
Atlas2200
Delta5500
Falcon2110
H-II1100
Long March111100
Pegasus2200
PSLV3300
R-7101000
R-143300
R-362200
Safir1010Maiden flight
Space Shuttle4400
Universal Rocket111001
Zenit6600

By type

RocketCountryFamilyLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Ariane 5Ariane6600
Atlas VAtlas2200
Delta IIDelta5500
DneprR-362200
H-IIAH-II1100
Falcon 1Falcon2110
KosmosR-12/R-143300
Long March 2Long March4400
Long March 3Long March4400
Long March 4Long March3300
MolniyaR-71100
PegasusPegasus2200
PSLVPSLV3300
ProtonUniversal Rocket10901
SafirSafir1010Maiden flight
SoyuzR-78800
Soyuz-2R-71100
Space ShuttleSpace Shuttle4400
UR-100Universal Rocket1100
ZenitZenit6600

By configuration

RocketCountryTypeLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarks
Ariane 5 ESAriane 51100Maiden flight
Ariane 5 ECAAriane 55500
Atlas V 411Atlas V1100
Atlas V 421Atlas V1100
Delta II 7320Delta II1100
Delta II 7420Delta II2200
Delta II 7920HDelta II1100
Delta II 7925Delta II1100
DneprDnepr2200
H-IIA 2024H-IIA1100
Falcon 1Falcon 12110First successful launch
Kosmos-3MKosmos3300
Long March 2CLong March 21100
Long March 2DLong March 22200
Long March 2FLong March 21100
Long March 3ALong March 31100
Long March 3BLong March 31100
Long March 3B/ELong March 31100
Long March 3CLong March 31100Maiden flight
Long March 4BLong March 42200
Long March 4CLong March 41100
Molniya-M / 2BLMolniya1100
Pegasus-XLPegasus2200
Proton-K / DM-2Proton1100
Proton-M / DM-2Proton2200
Proton-M / Briz-MProton7601
PSLV-CAPSLV2200
PSLV-XLPSLV1100Maiden flight
Rokot / Briz-KMUR-1001100
SafirSafir1010Maiden flight
Soyuz-2.1bSoyuz-21100
Soyuz-FGSoyuz2200
Soyuz-FG / FregatSoyuz1100
Soyuz-USoyuz5500
Space ShuttleSpace Shuttle4400
Zenit-3SLZenit5500
Zenit-3SLBZenit1100Maiden flight

By launch site

SiteCountryLaunchesSuccessesFailuresPartial failuresRemarksTotal696621
Baikonur191801
Cape Canaveral3300
Dombarovsky1100
Jiuquan3300
Kapustin Yar1100
Kennedy4400
Kwajalein4310Two launches used Stargazer aircraft
Kourou6600
Ocean OdysseyUN International5500
Plesetsk6600
Satish Dhawan3300
Semnan1010First orbital launch attempt
Taiyuan4400
Tanegashima1100
Vandenberg4400
Xichang4400

By orbit

(transfer) : Inclined GSO : High Earth : Heliocentric

Orbital regimeLaunchesSuccessesFailuresAccidentally
achievedRemarksTotal696720
Transatmospheric0000
Low Earth36342011 to ISS
Medium Earth / Molniya6600
Geosynchronous / GTO252500
High Earth / Lunar transfer2200
Heliocentric / Planetary transfer0000

Notes

References

Footnotes

References

  1. (11 January 2008). "36.243 UG McCandliss/Johns Hopkins University". NASA Sounding Rockets Office.
  2. Baldwin, Emily. (2008-10-08). "Cassini prepares for double flyby of Enceladus". Astronomy Now.
  3. (2008-06-20). "NASA Phoenix Mars Lander Confirms Frozen Water". NASA.
  4. "Ulysses". ESA.
  5. Harwood, William. (2008-05-02). "Whitson describes rough Soyuz entry and landing". Spaceflight Now.
  6. Clark, Stephen. (2008-09-27). "China accomplishes its first spacewalk". Spaceflight Now.
  7. (14 January 2023). "AMC-14".
  8. "Participants". Celestis.
  9. (18 August 2008). "Iran says it has put first dummy satellite in orbit, sparks U.S. concern".
  10. Karimi, Nasser. (2008-08-17). "Iran tests rocket for future launch of satellite". Fox News.
  11. (22 August 2008). "NASA destroys rocket shortly after launch at Wallops Island". Virginian Pilot.
  12. (14 February 2008). "U.S. to launch missile at broken satellite". NBC News.
  13. (2008-02-21). "US Missile hits 'toxic satellite'". BBC News.
  14. Halvorson, Todd. (2008-01-02). "Lofty Launch Goals Set for 2008". Space.com.
  15. McDowell, Dr. Jonathan. (14 March 2008). "Issue 593". Jonathan's Space Report.
  16. Bergin, Chris. (8 April 2008). "Soyuz TMA-12 launches Expedition 17 and first South Korean". NASASpaceflight.com.
  17. Bergin, Chris. (7 February 2008). "STS-122: Atlantis home after perfect re-entry and landing". NASASpaceflight.com.
  18. link. (1 March 2019). JAXA
  19. Ray, Justin. (26 March 2008). "STS-123 Mission Status Center (Landing)". Spaceflight Now.
  20. (18 March 2008). "Space shuttle to return pallet full of history". collectSPACE.
  21. Krebs, Gunter. (13 March 2008). "Trumpet F/O". Gunter's Space Page.
  22. ILS Communications Team. (17 March 2008). "We Have Lift Off". International Launch Services.
  23. Slimmer, Fran. (14 March 2008). "ILS Declares Proton Launch Anomaly". International Launch Services.
  24. (10 April 2008). "Boeing Patent Shuts Down AMC-14 Lunar Flyby Salvage Attempt". Space-Travel.com.
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