List of interplanetary voyages

Last updated

This is a comprehensive list of interplanetary spaceflights, spaceflight between two or more bodies of the Solar System, listed in chronological order by launch date. It includes only flights that escaped Earth orbit and reached the vicinity of another planet, asteroid, or comet. Flights that were planned but not executed, were destroyed at or shortly after launch, or missed their target entirely are not included. Flights which reached, but failed to return useful scientific data regarding their target, are given a gray background.

Contents

The list is divided between flights that stopped at a destination, and those that flew by their target.

Completed flights

The following flights were completed by matching velocity with the target object, whether by station-keeping, entering orbit, landing, or impact.

1960s

SpacecraftDestinationDate and
launch site
Reached planetFlight durationNotesRef
Venera 3 Venus16 November 1965
Molniya M
Baikonur 31/6
1 March 1966
impact
106 days
(3 mo, 14 d)
Venera 3 was intended to soft-land on Venus. Contact with the spacecraft was lost before arrival, and Venera 3 crashed. [1]
Venera 4 Venus12 June 1967
Molniya 8K78M
Baikonur 1/5
18 October 1967
entered atmosphere
129 days
(4 mo, 7 d)
Venera 4, a Venus atmosphere probe, continued to transmit to an altitude of 25 km [2]
Venera 5 Venus5 January 1969
Molniya 8K78M
Baikonur 1/5
16 May 1969
entered atmosphere
132 days
(4 mo, 12 d)
Venera 5 was a Venus atmosphere probe. [3]
Venera 6 Venus10 January 1969
Molniya 8K78M
Baikonur 1/5
17 May 1969
entered atmosphere
128 days
(4 mo, 8 d)
Venera 6 was a Venus atmosphere probe. [4]

1970s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunch dateReached planetFlight durationNotesRef
Venera 7 landerVenus17 August 197015 December 1970
landed
121 days
(3 mo, 29 d)
Venera 7 made the first successful landing on another planet, and returned signals from the surface of Venus for 23 minutes. [5]
Mars 2 Orbiter and Lander Mars19 May 197127 November 1971
impact
193 days
(6 mo, 9 d)
The Mars 2 lander crashed into Mars on 27 November 1971, in a failed soft landing attempt. It was the first manmade object to reach the surface of Mars. The orbiter continued operating until 22 August 1972. [6] [7]
Mars 3 Orbiter and Lander Mars28 May 19712 December 1971
entered orbit/landed
189 days
(6 mo, 5 d)
Mars 3 did not attain its intended orbit due to insufficient fuel. The lander reached the surface on 2 December 1971, but contact was lost immediately afterward. The orbiter continued operating until 22 August 1972. [8] [9]
Mariner 9 Orbiter Mars30 May 197114 November 1971
entered orbit
169 days
(5 mo, 16 d)
Mariner 9 was the first spacecraft to orbit another planet. It remained active until 27 October 1972. [10]
Venera 8 landerVenus27 March 197222 July 1972
landed
118 days
(3 m, 26 d)
Venera 8 returned signals from the surface of Venus for 50 minutes. [11]
Mars 5 Orbiter Mars25 July 197312 February 1974
entered orbit
203 days
(6 mo, 19 d)
Mars 5 collected images and other data from Mars for 22 days. [12]
Mars 6 Lander Mars5 August 197312 March 1974
impact
220 days
(7 mo, 8 d)
Mars 6 crash-landed on Mars and contact with the craft was lost. [13]
Venera 9 orbiter and landerVenus8 June 197520 October 1975 entered orbit
22 October 1975 landed
135 days
(4 mo, 13 d)
The Venera 9 lander transmitted the first images from the surface of Venus. [14] [15]
Venera 10 orbiter and landerVenus14 June 197523 October 1975 entered orbit
25 October 1975 landed
132 days
(4 mo, 10 d)
Venera 10 successfully landed and sent back images from the surface of Venus. [16] [17]
Viking 1 Orbiter and Lander Mars20 August 197519 June 1976 entered orbit
20 July 1976 landed
305 days
(10 mo)
Viking 1 transmitted the first images from the surface of Mars. The Viking orbiter was active until 17 August 1980, the lander until 13 November 1982. [18] [19]
Viking 2 Orbiter and Lander Mars9 September 19757 August 1976 entered orbit
3 September 1976 landed
334 days
(10 mo, 30 d)
Viking 2 was the second craft to land on Mars. The Viking orbiter was active until 25 July 1978, the lander until 11 April 1980. [20] [21]
Pioneer Venus Orbiter Venus20 May 19784 December 1978
entered orbit
199 days
(6 mo, 15 d)
Pioneer Venus made radar and other observations of Venus. The orbiter operated until August 1992. [22]
Pioneer Venus Multiprobe Venus8 August 19789 December 1978
entered atmosphere
124 days
(4 mo, 2 d)
The Pioneer Venus multiprobe included a "bus" and four atmospheric probes, one of which survived its impact with Venus and continued to transmit from the surface for over an hour. [23] [24] [25] [26] [27]
Venera 12 LanderVenus14 September 197821 December 1978
landed
99 days
(3 mo, 8 d)
Venera 12 returned data for 110 minutes. Images were not returned. [28]
Venera 11 LanderVenus9 September 197825 December 1978
landed
107 days
(3 mo, 16 d)
Venera 11 returned data for 95 minutes. Images were not returned. [29]

1980s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedReached planetFlight durationNotesRef
Venera 13 LanderVenus30 October 19811 March 1982
landed
123 days
(4 months, 2 days)
Venera 13 survived on the surface of Venus for 127 minutes. [30]
Venera 14 LanderVenus4 November 19815 March 1982
landed
122 days
(4 months, 2 days)
Venera 14 survived on the surface of Venus for 57 minutes. [31]
Venera 15 OrbiterVenus2 June 198310 October 1983
entered orbit
131 days
(4 months, 9 days)
Venera 15 carried out radar mapping of Venus. [32]
Venera 16 OrbiterVenus7 June 198314 October 1983
entered orbit
130 days
(4 months, 8 days)
Venera 16 carried out radar mapping of Venus. [33]
Vega 1 Lander and balloonVenus15 December 198411 June 1985
landed/deployed
179 days
(5 months, 28 days)
Some of the Vega 1's instruments deployed prematurely, rendering them useless. [34] [35]
Vega 2 Lander and balloonVenus21 December 198415 June 1985
landed/deployed
177 days
(5 months, 26 days)
[36] [37]
Phobos 2 Orbiter and Lander Mars and Phobos12 July 198829 January 1989202 days
(6 months, 18 days)
Phobos 2 achieved Mars orbit, but contact was lost on 27 March 1989 shortly before Phobos approach phase and deployment of Phobos landers [38]
Magellan OrbiterVenus4 May 198910 August 1990
entered orbit
464 days
(1 yr, 3 mo, 7 d)
Magellan carried out global radar mapping of Venus. Magellan's mission continued to 12 October 1994, when the craft burned up in Venus' atmosphere. [39]
Galileo orbiter and atmosphere probeJupiter18 October 19897 December 1995
entered orbit
2242 days
(6 yr, 1 mo, 20 d)
Flew by several of Jupiter's moons; impacted into Jupiter 21 September 2003. [40] [41]

1990s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedReached planetFlight durationNotesRef
Mars Observer orbiterMars25 September 199224 August 1993
entered orbit?
334 days
(11 months)
Contact with Mars Observer was lost 21 August 1993, shortly before Mars orbit insertion. May not have attained Mars orbit. [42] [43] [44] [45] [46]
Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) Asteroid 433 Eros 17 February 199614 February 2000 entered orbit
12 February 2001 landed
1459 days
(3 yr, 11 mo, 29 d)
The orbiter performed an improvised landing on Eros. Its mission ended 28 February 2001. [47]
Mars Global Surveyor orbiterMars7 November 199611 September 1997
entered orbit
309 days
(10 months, 5 days)
Contact lost after 5 November 2006. [48]
Mars Pathfinder lander and Sojourner roverMars4 December 19964 July 1997
landed
213 days
(7 months, 1 day)
Rover deployed 6 July 1997. Mission continued to 27 September 1997. [49] [50]
Cassini orbiter
and Huygens Titan lander
Saturn and Titan15 October 19971 July 2004 entered orbit2452 days (6 yr, 8 mo, 17 d)Mission ended 15 September 2017. Saturn orbiter, performing repeated by-flights of Saturn's moons; also deployed the Huygens Titan lander, the first probe to land on a satellite of another planet. [51] [52]
14 January 2005
Huygens landed on Titan
2649 days (Huygens) (7 years, 3 months)
Mars Climate Orbiter Mars11 December 199823 September 1999
entered atmosphere
287 days
(9 months, 13 days)
Orbit insertion failed due to a navigational error, and Mars Climate Orbiter burned up in the Martian atmosphere. [53]
Mars Polar Lander with Deep Space 2 ground-penetrators "Amundsen" and "Scott"Mars3 January 19993 December 1999
entered atmosphere
335 days
(11 months, 1 day)
Contact with Mars Polar Lander was lost just prior to entering the Martian atmosphere. [54] [55]

2000s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedReached planetFlight durationNotesRef
Mars Odyssey orbiterMars7 April 200124 October 2001
entered orbit
201 days
(6 months, 18 days)
Continuing mission. [56]
Hayabusa and MINERVA Asteroid 25143 Itokawa 9 May 200312 September 2005 matched velocity with Itokawa
19 and 25 November 2005 landings
858 days
(2 yr, 4 mo, 4 d)
The MINERVA hopper was lost on 12 November 2005. Hayabusa's return journey to Earth began in April 2007; the spacecraft returned to Earth 13 June 2010. [57]
Mars Express orbiter and Beagle 2 landerMars2 June 200325 December 2003
entered orbit
207 days
(6 months, 24 days)
Continuing mission. Contact with Beagle 2 was lost after entering Mars' atmosphere on 25 December 2003. [58]
MER-A Spirit rover Mars10 June 20034 January 2004
landed
209 days
(6 months, 26 days)
Last contact on 22 March 2010. [59]
MER-B Opportunity rover Mars7 July 200325 January 2004
landed
203 days
(6 months, 19 days)
Last contact on 10 June 2018 [60]
Rosetta orbiter and Philae lander Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko 2 March 20046 August 2014 (Entered orbit)
12 November 2014 (Philae landed)
N/A64 Hours data transmission. Lander reactivated for 85 seconds 13 June 2015. Controlled impact to end mission on 30 September 2016. [61] [62]
MESSENGER Mercury3 August 200417 March 2011 entered orbit2418 days
(6 years, 7 months, 15 days)
First probe to orbit Mercury. Deorbited on 30 April 2015 [63]
Deep Impact impactor Comet 9P/Tempel 12 January 20054 July 2005
impacted Tempel
174 days
(5 months, 23 days)
First probe to directly impact a comet. [64]
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Mars12 August 200510 March 2006
entered orbit
211 days
(6 months, 27 days)
Continuing mission. [65] [66]
Venus Express OrbiterVenus9 November 200511 April 2006
entered orbit
154 days
(5 months, 3 days)
Continuing mission to study the atmosphere of Venus. Last contact 18 January 2015. [67]
Phoenix LanderMars4 August 200725 May 2008
landed
296 days
(9 months, 22 days)
Collected soil samples near Mars' north pole to elucidate the history of water on Mars. Mission concluded 10 November 2008. [68]
Dawn Asteroid 4 Vesta 27 September 200716 July 2011
entered orbit
1388 days
(3 years, 9 months, 19 days)
Departed Vesta for 1 Ceres 5 September 2012. [69]
1 Ceres 6 March 2015
entered orbit
2718 days
(7 years, 5 months, 8 days)
Last contact 31 October 2018. [70]

2010s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedReached planetFlight durationNotesRef
Akatsuki Venus20 May 20107 December 2015
entered orbit
N/AEntered orbit five years after failed orbit insertion on 7 December 2010. Continuing mission to study the atmosphere of Venus. [71]
Juno Jupiter5 August 20114 July 2016
entered orbit
1,795 days (4 y, 10 m, 29 d)First solar-powered Jupiter orbiter, mission to study Jupiter's interior and magnetic environment. [72]
Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity - Rover)Mars26 November 20116 August 2012
landed
253 days (8 m, 10 d) 14h 15m 57s900 kg mobile lander [73]
Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan)Mars5 November 2013Reached Mars orbit on 24 September 2014
MAVEN Mars18 November 2013Reached Mars orbit on 22 September 2014
Hayabusa2 with MINERVA-II rovers
and MASCOT lander
Asteroid 162173 Ryugu 3 December 201427 June 2018 matched velocity with Ryugu
21 February 2019 landing
ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO)/
Schiaparelli lander
Mars14 March 201619 October 2016Schiaparelli failed to land. TGO is still active to this date.
OSIRIS-REx 101955 Bennu 8 September 20163 December 2018Orbiter and Sample Return.
InSight Mars5 May 201826 November 2018
landed
Robotic lander
BepiColombo Mercury20 October 20185 December 2025
(planned)
2604 days (7 yr, 1 mo, 16 d)Dual satellite mission. [74]

2020s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Emirates Mars Mission Mars19 July 20209 February 2020
in orbit
Orbiter
Tianwen-1 Mars23 July 202010 February 2021
landed
Robotic orbiter, deployable and remote cameras, lander, rover
Mars 2020 Mars30 July 202018 February 2021
landed
Robotic rover and helicopter
Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) Dimorphos 24 November 202126 November 2022
impacted
Impactor spacecraft that crashed into the minor-planet moon Dimorphos, deployed flyby cubesat LICIACube 15 days before.
Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE)Jupiter14 April 2023July 2031
(planned)
Orbiter
Psyche Asteroid 16 Psyche 13 October 2023August 2029
(planned)
Orbiter [75]

Passing flights

The following flights flew by the target object at close range, but did not match velocity with their target or continued to another destination.

1960s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunch dateClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Venera 1 Venus12 February 196119 May 196197 days
(3 months, 8 days)
Contact with Venera 1 was lost 7 days after launch. It was the first spacecraft to fly by Venus, or indeed any planet. [76]
Mariner 2 Venus27 August 196214 December 1962110 days
(3 months, 18 days)
Mariner 2 flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 34,773 km. It was the first spacecraft to return data from Venus. [77]
Mars 1 Mars1 November 196219 June 1963231 days
(7 months, 19 days)
Mars 1 flew within approx. 193,000 km of Mars. Contact with it was lost on 21 March 1963. [78]
Zond 1 Venus2 April 196414 July? 1964104 days
(3 months, 13 days)
Zond 1 was intended as a Venus lander. Contact with it was lost en route. [79]
Mariner 4 Mars28 November 196415 July 1965230 days
(7 months, 18 days)
Mariner 4 returned the first close-up images of Mars. [80]
Zond 2 Mars30 November 19646 August 1965250 days
(8 months, 8 days)
Zond 2 flew within 1,500 km of Mars. Contact with it was lost en route. [81]
Venera 2 Venus12 November 196527 February 1966108 days
(3 months, 16 days)
Venera 2 flew by Venus at a distance of 24,000 km, but ceased to operate en route. [82]
Mariner 5 Venus14 June 196719 October 1967128 days
(4 months, 6 days)
Mariner 5 flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 5,000 km. [83]
Mariner 6 Mars25 February 196931 July 1969156 days
(5 months, 6 days)
Mariner 6 flew by Mars. [84]
Mariner 7 Mars27 March 19695 August 1969131 days
(4 months, 9 days)
Mariner 7 flew by Mars. [85]

1970s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Pioneer 10 Jupiter3 March 19723 December 1973641 days
(1 yr, 9 mos, 1 d)
Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to fly by Jupiter. [86]
Pioneer 11 Jupiter6 April 19734 December 1974608 days
(1 yr, 7 mo, 29 d)
Pioneer 11 flew by Jupiter. [87]
Saturn1 September 19792340 days
(6 yr, 4 mo, 27 d)
Pioneer 11 was the first spacecraft to fly by Saturn.
Mars 4 Mars21 July 197310 February 1974205 days
(6 months, 21 days)
Mars 4 failed to enter Mars orbit and flew by it instead. [88]
Mars 6 Mars5 August 197312 March 1974220 days
(7 months, 8 days)
The Mars 6 bus flew by Mars at a minimum distance of 1600 km. Also carried a lander. [13]
Mars 7 Mars9 August 19739 March 1974213 days
(7 months, 1 day)
Mars 7's lander was released prematurely and missed Mars. [89]
Mariner 10 Venus3 November 19735 February 197495 days
(3 months, 3 days)
Mariner 10 flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 5768 km. It was the first use of a gravity assist by an interplanetary spacecraft. [90]
Mercury29 March 1974147 days
(4 months, 27 days)
Mariner 10 flew by Mercury at a minimum distance of 704 km.
21 September 1974323 days
(10 months, 19 days)
Mariner 10 flew by Mercury at a minimum distance of 48,069 km.
16 March 1975499 days
(1 yr, 4 mo, 14 d)
Mariner 10 flew by Mercury at a minimum distance of 327 km.
Voyager 2 Jupiter20 August 19779 July 1979689 days
(1 yr, 10 mo, 20 d)
Voyager 2 flew by Jupiter. [91]
Saturn5 August 19811447 days
(3 yr, 11 mo, 17 d)
Voyager 2 flew by Saturn.
Uranus24 January 19863080 days
(8 yr, 5 mo, 5 d)
Voyager 2 flew by Uranus and was the first spacecraft to visit it.
Neptune25 August 19894389 days
(12 yr, 6 days)
Voyager 2 flew by Neptune and was the first spacecraft to visit it.
Voyager 1 Jupiter5 September 19775 March 1979547 days
(1 yr, 6 mo, 1 d)
Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and returned the first detailed images. [92]
Saturn12 November 19801165 days
(3 yr, 2 mo, 8 d)
Voyager 1 flew by Saturn.
ICE Comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner 12 August 197811 September 19852588 days
(7 yr, 1 mo)
ICE flew by Giacobini-Zinner. ICE was previously the solar monitor ISEE3. [93]
Comet 1P/Halley 28 March 19862786 days
(7 yr, 7 mo, 17 d)
ICE flew by Halley at a minimum distance of 32 million km.
Venera 11 Venus9 September 197825 December 1978108 days
(3 months, 17 days)
The Venera 11 bus flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 34,000 km and left a lander. [94]
Venera 12 Venus14 September 197819 December 197897 days
(3 months, 6 days)
The Venera 12 bus flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 34,000 km and left a lander. [95]

1980s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Venera 13 Venus30 October 19811 March 1982123 days
(4 months, 2 days)
The Venera 13 bus flew by Venus and left a lander. [96]
Venera 14 Venus4 November 19815 March 1982122 days
(4 months, 2 days)
The Venera 14 bus flew by Venus and left a lander. [97]
Vega 1 Venus15 December 198411 June 1985179 days
(5 months, 28 days)
Vega 1 flew by Venus. [98]
Comet 1P/Halley 6 March 1986447 days
(1 yr, 2 mo, 20 d)
Vega 1 flew by Halley at a minimum distance of 8,890 km.
Vega 2 Venus21 December 198415 June 1985177 days
(5 months, 26 days)
Vega 2 flew by Venus. [99]
Comet 1P/Halley 9 March 1986444 days
(1 yr, 2 mo, 17 d)
Vega 2 flew by Halley at a minimum distance of 8,890 km.
Sakigake Comet 1P/Halley 7 January 198511 March 1986429 days
(1 yr, 2 mo, 5 d)
Sakigake flew by Halley at a minimum distance of 6.99 million km. [100]
Giotto Comet 1P/Halley 2 July 198514 March 1986256 days
(8 months, 13 days)
Giotto flew by Halley at a minimum distance of 596 km. [101]
Comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup 10 July 19922566 days
(7 yr, 9 d)
Giotto flew by Grigg-Skjellerup
Suisei Comet 1P/Halley 18 August 19858 March 1986203 days
(6 mo, 19 d)
Suisei flew by Halley at a minimum distance of 151,000 km. [102]
Galileo Venus18 October 198910 February 1990116 days
(3 months, 24 days)
Galileo flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 16,000 km as a gravity assist en route to Jupiter. [103]
Asteroid 951 Gaspra 29 October 1991742 days
(2 yr, 12 d)
Galileo flew by Gaspra at a minimum distance of 1900 km en route to Jupiter.
Asteroid 243 Ida 28 August 19931411 days
(3 yr, 10 mo, 11 d)
Galileo flew by Ida at a minimum distance of 2400 km en route to Jupiter. It discovered the first known asteroid moon, Dactyl.

1990s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Ulysses Jupiter6 October 19908 February 1992491 days
(1 yr, 4 mo, 3 d)
Ulysses flew by Jupiter for a gravity assist en route to solar polar observations [104]
Jupiter4 February 20044870 days
(13 yr, 3 mo, 30 d)
Ulysses flew by Jupiter at a minimum distance of 0.8 AU.
Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous Asteroid 253 Mathilde 17 February 199627 June 1997497 days
(1 yr, 4 mo, 11 d)
NEAR flew by Mathilde en route to Eros. [47]
Asteroid 433 Eros 23 December 19981041 days
(2 yr, 10 mo, 7 d)
NEAR flew by Eros at a minimum distance of 3827 km after a failed attempt to enter orbit. NEAR attained orbit later (see Completed Flights).
Cassini Venus15 October 199726 April 1998194 days
(6 months, 12 days)
Cassini flew by Venus for a first gravity assist en route to Saturn. [51] [105]
Venus24 June 1999618 days
(1 yr, 8 mo, 10 d)
Cassini flew by Venus for a second gravity assist en route to Saturn.
Asteroid 2685 Masursky 23 January 2000831 days
(2 yr, 3 mo, 9 d)
Cassini flew by Masursky en route to Saturn.
Jupiter30 December 20001173 days
(3 yr, 2 mo, 16 d)
Cassini flew by Jupiter for a gravity assist en route to Saturn.
Nozomi Mars3 July 199814 December 20031991 days
(5 yr, 5 mo, 12 d)
Nozomi failed to attain an orbit around Mars and flew by it instead. [106]
Deep Space 1 Asteroid 9969 Braille 24 October 199829 July 1999279 days
(9 months, 6 days)
Deep Space 1 flew by Braille. No close-up images were made due to a camera pointing error. [107]
Comet 19P/Borrelly 22 September 20011065 days
(2 yr, 10 mo, 30 d)
Deep Space 1 flew by Borrelly and returned images.
Stardust Asteroid 5535 Annefrank 7 February 19992 November 20021365 days
(3 yr, 8 mo, 27 d)
Stardust flew by Annefrank [108]
Comet 81P/Wild 21 January 20041810 days
(4 yr, 11 mo, 15 d)
Stardust flew a sample return mission by Wild.
Comet 9P/Tempel 14 February 2011N/AStardust flew by Tempel on an extended mission.

2000s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunchedClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Rosetta Mars2 March 200425 February 20071091 days
(2 yr, 11 mo, 24 d)
Rosetta flew by Mars as a gravity assist on the way to future encounters. [61]
Asteroid 2867 Šteins 5 September 20081649 days
(4 yr, 6 mo, 11 d)
Rosetta flew by Šteins.
Asteroid 21 Lutetia 10 July 20102322 days (6 yr, 4 mo, 9 d)Rosetta flew by Lutetia en route to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
MESSENGER Venus3 August 200424 October 2006813 days
(2 yr, 2 mo, 22 d)
Messenger flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 2990 km. This was for a gravity assist only; no data was collected. [63]
6 June 20071038 days
(2 yr, 10 mo, 4 d)
Messenger flew by Venus at a minimum distance of 300 km en route to Mercury.
Mercury14 January 20081260 days
(3 yr, 5 mo, 12 d)
Messenger flew by Mercury a first time en route to Mercury orbit insertion.
29 September 20091884 days
(5 yr, 1 mo, 27 d)
Messenger flew by Mercury a second time.
Deep Impact Comet 9P/Tempel 12 January 20053 July 2005173 days
(5 months, 22 days)
Deep Impact flew by Tempel. [64]
Comet 103P/Hartley 2 4 November 20102122 days
(5 years, 9 months, 23 days)
Deep Impact flew by and imaged Hartley 2 as part of its extended mission.
New Horizons Asteroid 132524 APL 19 January 200613 June 2006146 days
(4 months, 26 days)
New Horizons flew by 132524 APL en route to Pluto. [109]
Jupiter28 February 2007416 days
(1 years, 1 months, 20 days)
New Horizons flew by Jupiter as a gravity assist en route to Pluto.
Pluto14 July 20153318 days
(9 years, 1 month, 1 day)
New Horizons flew by the Pluto system.
486958 Arrokoth 1 January 20194730 days
(12 years, 11 months, 13 days)
First flyby of a small Kuiper Belt Object
Dawn Mars27 September 200717 February 2009509 days
(1 yr, 4 mo, 21 d)
Dawn flew by Mars at a closest approach of 549 km for a gravity assist en route to the asteroids Vesta and Ceres [69]

2010s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunch dateClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
Akatsuki Venus20 May 20107 December 2010201 days (6 months, 17 days)Attempted but failed to enter orbit; later entered orbit during a second attempt on 7 December 2015
Chang'e 2 Asteroid 4179 Toutatis 1 October 201013 December 2012804 days (2 years, 2 months, 12 days)
PROCYON Asteroid (185851) 2000 DP107 4 December 2014Failed 3 December 2015, and thus never made the flyby.
MarCO Mars5 May 201826 November 2018206 days
(6 mo, 22 d)
Provided communications support for the landing of InSight. Went silent in heliocentric orbit on 5 January 2019. [110]
Parker Solar Probe Venus12 August 201811 July 2020700 days
(1 yr, 11 mo)
Obtain direct solar observations. Not making observations during the Venus flybys.
BepiColombo Venus20 October 201810 August 20211028 days
(2 yr, 9 mo, 24 d)
Second of two Venus gravity assist en route to Mercury. [111]
Mercury1 October 20211078 days
(2 yr, 11 mo, 12 d)
First of six Mercury gravity assist en route to Mercury orbital insertion.

2020s

SpacecraftDestinationLaunch dateClosest approachTime elapsedNotesRef
LICIACube Asteroid 65803 Didymos 24 November 202126 September 2022307 days
(10 mo, 7 d)
Separated from DART and took pictures of its impact with the asteroid. [112]
Lucy Asteroid 152830 Dinkinesh 16 October 20211 November 2023
(planned)
746 days
(2 yr, 17 d)
[113]
Asteroid 52246 Donaldjohanson 20 April 2025
(planned)
1283 days
(3 yr, 6 mo, 5 d)
Asteroid 3548 Eurybates 12 August 2027
(planned)
4156 days
(11 yr, 4 mo, 15 d)
Asteroid 15094 Polymele 15 September 2027
(planned)
2161 days
(5 yr, 11 mo)
Asteroid 11351 Leucus 18 April 2028
(planned)
2377 days
(6 yr, 6 mo, 3 d)
Asteroid 21900 Orus 11 November 2028
(planned)
2584 days
(7 yr, 27 d)
Asteroid 617 Patroclus 2 March 2033
(planned)
2377 days
(6 yr, 6 mo, 3 d)
Psyche Mars13 October 2023May 2026
(planned)
Mars gravity assist en route to the asteroid 16 Psyche [75]

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The Explorers program is a NASA exploration program that provides flight opportunities for physics, geophysics, heliophysics, and astrophysics investigations from space. Launched in 1958, Explorer 1 was the first spacecraft of the United States to achieve orbit. Over 90 space missions have been launched since. Starting with Explorer 6, it has been operated by NASA, with regular collaboration with a variety of other institutions, including many international partners.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mariner 4</span> Robotic spacecraft sent by NASA to Mars (1964–67)

Mariner 4 was the fourth in a series of spacecraft intended for planetary exploration in a flyby mode. It was designed to conduct closeup scientific observations of Mars and to transmit these observations to Earth. Launched on November 28, 1964, Mariner 4 performed the first successful flyby of the planet Mars, returning the first close-up pictures of the Martian surface. It captured the first images of another planet ever returned from deep space; their depiction of a cratered, dead planet largely changed the scientific community's view of life on Mars. Other mission objectives were to perform field and particle measurements in interplanetary space in the vicinity of Mars and to provide experience in and knowledge of the engineering capabilities for interplanetary flights of long duration. Initially expected to remain in space for eight months, Mariner 4's mission lasted about three years in solar orbit. On December 21, 1967, communications with Mariner 4 were terminated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mariner 9</span> Successful 1971 Mars robotic spacecraft

Mariner 9 was a robotic spacecraft that contributed greatly to the exploration of Mars and was part of the NASA Mariner program. Mariner 9 was launched toward Mars on May 30, 1971, from LC-36B at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, and reached the planet on November 14 of the same year, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit another planet – only narrowly beating the Soviet probes Mars 2 and Mars 3, which both arrived at Mars only weeks later.

This timeline of artificial satellites and space probes includes uncrewed spacecraft including technology demonstrators, observatories, lunar probes, and interplanetary probes. First satellites from each country are included. Not included are most Earth science satellites, commercial satellites or crewed missions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timeline of Solar System exploration</span>

This is a timeline of Solar System exploration ordering events in the exploration of the Solar System by date of spacecraft launch. It includes:

Tyazhely Sputnik, also known by its development name as Venera 1VA No. 1, and in the West as Sputnik 7, was a Soviet spacecraft, which was intended to be the first spacecraft to explore Venus. Due to a problem with its upper stage it failed to leave low Earth orbit. In order to avoid acknowledging the failure, the Soviet government instead announced that the entire spacecraft, including the upper stage, was a test of a "Heavy Satellite" which would serve as a launch platform for future missions. This resulted in the upper stage being considered a separate spacecraft, from which the probe was "launched", on several subsequent missions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Discovery Program</span> Ongoing solar system exploration program by NASA

The Discovery Program is a series of Solar System exploration missions funded by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) through its Planetary Missions Program Office. The cost of each mission is capped at a lower level than missions from NASA's New Frontiers or Flagship Programs. As a result, Discovery missions tend to be more focused on a specific scientific goal rather than serving a general purpose.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lunar Orbiter 4</span> United States lunar probe

Lunar Orbiter 4 was a robotic U.S. spacecraft, part of the Lunar Orbiter Program, designed to orbit the Moon, after the three previous orbiters had completed the required needs for Apollo mapping and site selection. It was given a more general objective, to "perform a broad systematic photographic survey of lunar surface features in order to increase the scientific knowledge of their nature, origin, and processes, and to serve as a basis for selecting sites for more detailed scientific study by subsequent orbital and landing missions". It was also equipped to collect selenodetic, radiation intensity, and micrometeoroid impact data.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heliocentric orbit</span> Orbit around the barycenter of the Sun

A heliocentric orbit is an orbit around the barycenter of the Solar System, which is usually located within or very near the surface of the Sun. All planets, comets, and asteroids in the Solar System, and the Sun itself are in such orbits, as are many artificial probes and pieces of debris. The moons of planets in the Solar System, by contrast, are not in heliocentric orbits, as they orbit their respective planet.

This is a timeline of space exploration which includes notable achievements, first accomplishments and milestones in humanity's exploration of outer space.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Planetary flyby</span> Sending a space probe past a planet or dwarf planet

A planetary flyby is the act of sending a space probe past a planet or a dwarf planet close enough to record scientific data. This is a subset of the overall concept of a flyby in spaceflight.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1975 in spaceflight</span>

In 1975 several notable events happened in spaceflight such as the launch and arrival at Venus of Venera 9 and 10, the launch to Mars of the Viking orbiter/landers missions, the joint Apollo–Soyuz Test Project, and the launch of satellite Aryabhatta.

<i>Janus</i> (spacecraft)

Janus was a planned NASA mission that would have sent dual space probes to visit asteroids chosen prior to launch. The mission was part of NASA's SIMPLEx program and was expected to be launched in 2022 as a secondary payload on Falcon Heavy together with the Psyche spacecraft, but it was removed due to delays with Psyche. The mission budget was limited to US$55 million.

The Surveillance Calibration satellites were a series of radar calibration satellites for the Naval Space Surveillance radar system. They were launched in the 1960s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration</span> NASA program

Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration (SIMPLEx) is a planetary exploration program operated by NASA. The program funds small, low-cost spacecraft for stand-alone planetary exploration missions. These spacecraft are intended to launch as secondary payloads on other missions and are riskier than Discovery or New Frontiers missions.

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See also