Chronology Of Notable Astronauts

Oct 5, 2023 - 17:28
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The term astronaut is commonly applied to an individual who has flown in outer space. More specifically, astronauts are those persons who went to space aboard a U.S. spacecraft; individuals who first traveled aboard a spacecraft operated by the Soviet Union or Russia are known as cosmonauts, and those from China are known as taikonauts. In the decades since Yury Gagarin became the first man in space in 1961, many milestones in space travel have been achieved by a variety of men and women from around the world.

The table provides a chronology of notable astronauts.

Chronology of notable astronauts
name mission date accomplishment

Yuri Gagarin

Yury Gagarin Vostok 1 April 12, 1961 first man in space

Alan Shepard

Alan Shepard Mercury-Redstone 3 (Freedom 7) May 5, 1961 first American in space

Vostok 2; Glenn, John; Kennedy, John F.; Titov, Gherman

Gherman Titov Vostok 2 Aug. 6–7, 1961 first to spend more than one day in space; youngest person (25 years old) in space

John Glenn

John Glenn Mercury-Atlas 6 (Friendship 7) Feb. 20, 1962 first American in orbit

STS-95; Glenn, John

STS-95 (Discovery) Oct. 28–Nov. 7, 1998 oldest person (77 years old) in space

Pavel Popovich on Vostok 4

Adriyan Nikolayev; Pavel Popovich Vostok 3; Vostok 4 Aug. 11–15, 1962; Aug. 12–15, 1962 first simultaneous flight of two spacecraft

Valentina Tereshkova

Valentina Tereshkova Vostok 6 June 16–19, 1963 first woman in space

cosmonaut; Voskhod I

Konstantin Feoktistov; Vladimir Komarov; Boris Yegorov Voshkod 1 Oct. 12–13, 1964 first multimanned spacecraft; first doctor in space (Yegorov)

Three stills from an external movie camera on the Soviet spacecraft Voskhod 2 recording pilot Aleksey Leonov making the first space walk, March 18, 1965.

Aleksey Leonov Voshkod 2 March 18–19, 1965 first person to walk in space

Apollo 1

Roger Chaffee; Virgil Grissom; Edward White II Apollo 1 Jan. 27, 1967 killed in fire while testing spacecraft
Vladimir Komarov Soyuz 1 April 23–24, 1967 first spaceflight casualty

Frank Borman.

William Anders; Frank Borman; James Lovell Apollo 8 Dec. 21–27, 1968 first to fly around the Moon

Apollo 11 astronaut Edwin Aldrin, photographed by Neil Armstrong on July 20, 1969, during the first manned mission to the Moon's surface.

Neil Armstrong; Edwin ("Buzz") Aldrin Apollo 11 July 16–24, 1969 first to walk on the Moon

Apollo 13 astronauts

Fred Haise; James Lovell; Jack Swigert Apollo 13 April 11–17, 1970 farthest from Earth (401,056 km [249,205 miles]); survived oxygen-tank explosion
Georgy Dobrovolsky; Viktor Patsayev; Vladislav Volkov Soyuz 11/Salyut 1 June 6–29, 1971 first stay on a space station; first to die in space

Apollo 17

Eugene Cernan; Harrison Schmitt Apollo 17 Dec. 7–19, 1972 last to walk on the Moon

Apollo-Soyuz

Vance Brand; Donald Slayton; Thomas Stafford; Valery Kubasov; Aleksey Leonov Apollo-Soyuz July 17–19, 1975 first joint U.S.-Soviet spaceflight

Jähn, Sigmund

Sigmund Jähn Soyuz 31/Salyut 6/Soyuz 29 Aug. 26–Sept. 3, 1978 first German astronaut in space

Jean-Loup Chrétien.

Jean-Loup Chrétien Soyuz T-6/Salyut 7 June 24–July 2, 1982 first French astronaut in space

Sally Ride

Sally Ride STS-7 (Challenger) June 18–24, 1983 first American woman in space

Guion Bluford

Guion Bluford STS-8 (Challenger) Aug. 30–Sept. 5, 1983 first African American in space

Spacelab 1

Ulf Merbold STS-9 (Columbia) Nov. 28–Dec. 8, 1983 first ESA astronaut in space

Sharma, Rakesh

Rakesh Sharma Soyuz T-11/Salyut 7 April 3–11, 1984 first Indian in space

Marc Garneau

Marc Garneau STS-41-G (Challenger) Oct. 5–13, 1984 first Canadian in space

Franklin Chang-Díaz, 1997.

Franklin Chang-Díaz STS-61-C (Columbia) Jan. 12–18, 1986 first Hispanic American in space

Christa Corrigan McAuliffe.

Christa McAuliffe STS-51-L (Challenger) Jan. 28, 1986 was to have been the first teacher in space; killed in Challenger explosion

Akiyama Toyohiro.

Akiyama Tohiro Soyuz TM-11/Mir/Soyuz TM-10 Dec. 2–10, 1990 first Japanese in space; first commercial astronaut
Helen Sharman Soyuz TM-12/Mir/Soyuz TM-11 May 18–26, 1991 first Briton in space; first non-U.S., non-Russian female astronaut

Mae Jemison

Mae Jemison; Mohri Mamoru STS-47 (Endeavour) Sept. 12–20, 1992 first African American woman in space; first Japanese astronaut in space

Ellen Ochoa

Ellen Ochoa STS-56 (Discovery) April 8–17, 1993 first Hispanic American woman in space

Soyuz TM-20

Valery Polyakov Soyuz TM-18/Mir/Soyuz TM-20 Jan. 8, 1994– March 22, 1995 longest stay in space (438 days)

Sergey Krikalyov, 1998.

Sergey Krikalyov STS-60 (Discovery) Feb. 3–11, 1994 first Russian on U.S. spacecraft

Eileen Collins toys with a roll of paper scrap in microgravity while serving as pilot of the U.S. space shuttle orbiter Atlantis in May 1997.

Eileen Collins STS-93 (Columbia) July 23–28, 1999 first female space shuttle commander

Dennis Tito

Dennis Tito Soyuz TM-32/ISS/Soyuz TM-31 April 28–May 6, 2001 first space tourist

U.S. astronauts Jerry Ross (left) and James H. Newman on the final of three space walks of the STS-88 mission, December 15, 1998.

Jerry Ross STS-110 (Atlantis)/ISS April 8–19, 2002 first person to fly into space seven times

Yang Liwei

Yang Liwei Shenzhou 5 Oct. 15, 2003 first Chinese astronaut in space
Michael Melvill SpaceShipOne June 21, 2004 first private spaceflight

Yi Soyeon

Yi So-Yeon Soyuz TMA-12/ISS/Soyuz TMA-11 April 8–19, 2008 first Korean astronaut in space

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