Jump to content

List of fictional astronauts (miscellaneous futuristic activities)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Gildir (talk | contribs) at 14:28, 30 January 2021 (Other: : Italics). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lists of fictional astronauts
Early period Project Mercury Project Gemini
Project Apollo 1975–1989 1990–1999
2000–2009 2010–2029 Moon
Inner Solar System Outer Solar System Other
Far future
Actor William Lundigan as Col. Edward McCauley, Men into Space (TV series)

The following is a list of fictional astronauts on missions to deflect asteroids and comets which pose a threat to Earth, as well as performing other miscellaneous feats of space exploration not yet achieved.

Asteroid/comet deflection

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Edward McCauley, Col.
Stacy Croydon, Dr. (Scientist)
Emory, Maj.
Draper, Capt. (no first names given for last two)
Men into Space (a.k.a. Space Challenge)
Asteroid (1959), TV
United States Air Force:
Skyra mission
c. 1970–1980
Astronauts on mission to evaluate asteroid Skyra as possible location for space station, or, if necessary, to destroy it.[1]
Jack Rankin (Commander)
Vince Elliott (Station Commander)
Lisa "Lizzie" Benson, Dr. (Physician)
Martin, Capt.
Hans Halvorsen, Dr. (Space consultant)
Michaels (assistant to Halvorsen)
Curtis, Lt.
Dreger, Lt.
Morris, Lt.
Scott, Sgt.
Unnamed personnel
The Green Slime (1968), film U.N.S.C.:
Space Station Gamma 3
Unnamed rocket
Three support cruisers
Future
Mission to destroy asteroid on collision course with Earth results in infestation of space station by tentacled creatures.[2][3]
Unnamed CSM/LM:
Thomas Alvar Nicols, Maj.
Van Druten
Riley (first names not given)

Enterprise:
Richard Bradford Ridge, Maj. (Commander)
David Priestly (Co-Pilot)
Marvin Leisen (Navigator)
Jim O'Toole
Archie Carfagno

Orpheus:
Thomas Alvar Nicols, Maj. (Co-Pilot)
Richard Bradford Ridge, Maj. (Pilot)
The Hermes Fall (1978), novel Apollo
Unnamed CSM/LM
Orpheus (CSM)

Space Shuttle
Enterprise
1980
A NASA moonflight veteran and the commander of the first space shuttle mission are sent on a desperate mission to prevent the asteroid Hermes crashing into the Earth.[4]
Floyd Hartwell
Andrew Bukowski, Capt. (Air Force Astronaut Wing)
Leonard Dmetriev (USSR)
Unnamed Chinese astronaut
Impact! (1979), novel Argonaut XX Contemporary?
International astronauts on a mission to prevent an asteroid impacting Earth.[5]
Marlena Glenn, Lt.

Spaceplane:
Mark Blaze, Col. (Commander)
Andrea Steele, Maj.
He-Man and the Masters of the Universe
Visitors From Earth (1984), TV
Spaceplane Future
Astronauts on mission to destroy "magnetic meteor" accidentally travel through wormhole to Eternia. Lt. Glenn had previously disappeared and become Queen of Eternia.[6]
NASA:
Murasaki
Terrence "the Trance"
Turginson
Woodside

Atlantis:
Boston "Boz" Low (Commander)
Ken Borden (Copilot)
Cora Miles (Mission Specialist)
Ludger Brink, Prof. (EEC) (Mission Specialist)
Maggie Robbins (Journalist)
The Dig (1995), video game/novel Space Shuttle
Atlantis
Near Future
Mission to stabilize orbit of mysterious asteroid. Low is a five-time shuttle veteran who made emergency landing aboard Enterprise. Scientist Brink spent months aboard space station Mir II.[7][a]
Atlantis crew:
William Sharp, Col. (CMR)
Jennifer Watts (PLT)
Gruber (Nuclear Tech)
Charles "Chick" Chapple
Max Lennert
"Rockhound"
Harry Stamper
Davis, Col. (CMR)
Tucker (PLT)
Halsey, Lt. (Nuclear Tech)
Oscar Choi
A.J. Frost
Jayotis "Bear" Kurleenbear
Freddy Noonan
Lev Andropov
Armageddon (1998), film Space Shuttle
Atlantis

X-71 Military Space Shuttles:
Freedom
Independence

Mir (greatly expanded)
Contemporary
Atlantis destroyed by meteoroids preceding asteroid on collision course with Earth. X-71s each with 3 crew and 4 person drilling teams refuel at Mir, rescue Andropov from its destruction.[9]
Spurgeon "Fish" Tanner, Capt.
Oren Monash (Pilot)
Andrea "Andy" Baker
Gus Partenza, Dr.
Mark Simon
Michail Tulchinsky, Col. (cosmonaut)
Deep Impact (1998), film Space Shuttle
Atlantis

Messiah
Near Future
Astronauts on mission to destroy an oncoming comet.[10]
Gus Malone (CAPCOM)

Unnamed astronauts
Nemesis (1998), novel Space Shuttle Contemporary
Astronauts on mission to deflect an oncoming asteroid.[11]
NASA:
Claire Daughenbaugh, Capt. (USN) (Physician/Rukh carrier aircraft crew)
Doug Waterhouse

Envoy:
Samson "Sam" Quinn, Gen.[b] (USAF) (Commander)
Charles Stuart Loomis, Cdre. (USN) (Second-in-command/Weapons officer)
John Bernstein, Dr. (Physicist/Physician)
Stephen Edmunson, Maj. (USAF) (Weapons officer)
Martin Tillery, Cmdr. (USN) (Engineer/Physicist)

Firebird:
May Sherbourne Wyndham (Pilot/Rocket scientist)
Mycroft Yellowhorse (a.k.a. William Connors; born Guillaume Olivier Connors) (JNAIT Council of Chiefs Director-at-large)
Tobias Desmond "Toby" Glyer, Dr. (Engineer/Physician)
Alice Johnson (Security consultant)
The Goliath Stone (2013), novel NASA:
Envoy (40-V air launch to orbit spaceplane)

Joint Negotiating Alliance of Indian Tribes (JNAIT):
Firebird (40-V air launch to orbit spaceplane)
June 2052
Crews racing to intercept asteroid being returned to Earth by nanites.[12]
Asteris:
James Wheeler, Capt. (USMC)
Gordon, Dr. (Pentagon) (Physicist)
Clayton, Sgt. (Reconnaissance)
Cabrera, Cpl. (Demolitions)
Southard, Lt. (Communications)
Fitzpatrick (Pilot)
Sanchez (US Army) (Pilot)

Other SI-22s:
Magowan, Gen. (Pilot)
"Mac" McCanless, Col. (USAF) (Pilot)
Unnamed pilots
Age of Tomorrow (2014), film SI-22 Asteris [sp.?] (space shuttle)
Unnamed SI-22s
Contemporary/Near Future
Crew of mission to destroy asteroid is transported through wormhole to alien planet.[13]
Foresight Americo:
Xiaohán "Zoë"

One-person spacecraft:
Evan Chess (Mission Commander)
Jamila Parks (US) (SP)
Alistair Meath, Maj. (UK) (SP)
Valentina Resnick Baker, Dr. (SP)
David Powell (SP)
Catalyst Prime: The Event (2017), comic book Foresight Corporation:
Foresight Americo Lunar Platform (lunar-orbit space station)
Five one-person spacecraft
2017
Astronauts on suicide mission to destroy asteroid Icarus 2.[14]

Other

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Sky Masters, Maj. Sky Masters of the Space Force (1958–61), comic Unknown Near Future
Astronaut in the United States Space Force (USSF).
United States:
Edward McCauley, Col.
William Smith, Lt.
Lester Forsythe, Capt.
Donald Michaels, Capt.
Warnecke, Maj. (Dr.) (Physician)
William Thyssen, Dr. (Scientist)
Barrett, Capt.
Briggs, Maj.
Gibbie Gibson, Maj.
Bob Stark, Capt.
Horton, Dr. (Physicist)
Randolph, Dr. (Biologist)
Murphy, Lt. (Space Station Astra Executive Officer)
Hamilton, Dr. (Astronomer)
Stoner, Col.
Nick Alborg, Maj.
Bill Alborg, Lt. Col.
Art Frey, Lt.
Jerry Rutledge, Lt.
Franklin, Maj.
Williams, Capt.
Eden, Lt. (Navigator)
Paul Ellis, Maj. (Dr.) (Physician)
Muriel Catherine Gallagher, Dr. (Astronomer)
Caleb Fisk, Dr. (Astronomer)
Torrance Alexander, Dr. (Astronomer)
Arnold Rawdin, Dr. (Scientist)
Vern Driscoll, Lt. Col.
Summers, Maj. (Spacecraft commander)
Lewsham, Capt.
Johnny Farrow, Capt.
Swanson, Capt.
Bowyers, Maj.
Steven Hawkes, Maj. (Psychologist)
Thomas Ward, Capt. (Dr.) (Physician)
Canell, Maj. (Space Station Astra Executive Officer)
Fred Jones, Cpl.
Grinder, Sgt.
Saunders, Amn.
Luraski, Dr. (Geophysicist)
Ron Benson, Capt. (Communications Officer)
Hodges, Maj.
Bob King
"Tex" Nolan, Maj.
Others

UK:
Tom Hetherford, Grp Cpt (Vega commander)
Sopwith, Flt Lt (Vega co-pilot)
Neil Bedford-Jones, Lt (MR co-pilot)
Men into Space (a.k.a. Space Challenge) (1959–60), TV United States Air Force:
Space Station Astra
LX-318
0915
Reentry tests
Tanker Able
R-101
S-107
Eclipse
M-13
L78-1 missions
MR-28
X-1000
TR-1

British National Space Agency (UK):
Project Vega
MR (rescue mission)
c. 1970–1980
Future astronauts build and crew space station and fly near-Earth missions, including landings on asteroid L78-1.[15][16]
Lunar Base #1:
Lansfield, Col.
Cutler, Lt.
Unnamed personnel

Pegasus 3:
Leonard, Capt. (Pilot)
Webb, Lt. (Navigator)

Pegasus 4:
Frank Chapman, Capt. (Pilot)
Ray Makonnen, Lt. (Navigator)

Rescue ship:
Beecher, Capt.
White, Lt.
The Phantom Planet (1961), film United States Air Force
Space Exploration Wing:
Lunar Base #1
Pegasus 3 (Flight 361)
Pegasus 4
Rescue ship
1980 (from March 16)
Astronauts who investigate mysteriously appearing planet Rheton.[17][18][19][20]
Dead astronauts:
Merril (1998)
Pokrovski (1999)
Connolly
Tkachev
Maiakovski
Brodisnek (no first names given)
Roger Woodward

Travis (no first/last name given)
The Cage of Sand (1962), short story Unknown 1998
1999
21st century
Seven dead astronauts orbiting Earth in their slowly reentering space capsules. Merril and Pokrovski failed to reach launching platforms in Earth orbit; Woodward died testing new launching platform. Travis was rookie astronaut for civilian company whose courage failed during launch countdown.[21][22]
United States:
Scott, Capt. (no first name given)
Unnamed astronaut
Unnamed sergeant

Eastern Space Patrol:
Vaslov, Maj. (no first name given)
Colormation Screen Test (1962), short film International Space Commission:
Wheel 4 (Space station)

Eastern Space Patrol:
Red Star Patrol
Near Future
US astronaut tells Congressional committee about recent events in space.[23]
Prospero:
Grunfeld
Croker
Ness
Jackson
Unnamed captain

Caliban:
5 unnamed astronauts

Snug:
5 unnamed astronauts

Moth:
5 unnamed astronauts

Starveling:
5 unnamed astronauts
"The Snowbank Orbit" (1962), short story United States Space Force:
Prospero (ex-Mercury One)
Caliban
Snug
Moth
Starveling
Future[c]
Mercury-bound astronauts ordered to slingshot around the Sun and head for Uranus and a risky aerobraking maneuver when the solar system is invaded by aliens.[24]
Euro-American rocket:
George Larson (Captain)
Mike Fawsett (Vice-captain)
Tom Fiske (U.S. Army)
Uli Reinbach

Russo-Chinese rocket:
Nuri Bakovsky (Red Army) (Captain)
Ivan Kratov (Red Army)
Alexander Pitoyan (Scientist)
Tara Ilyana
Fifth Planet (1963), novel Euro-American rocket

Russo-Chinese rocket
c. 2087 (May) – 2089
Rival missions to Achilles, the fifth planet of Helios, a star passing through Earth's solar system. Ilyana is the first woman in space.[25]
Unnamed astronaut Labyrinth (1963), opera Unknown Unknown
Astronaut aboard rocket somehow located inside mysterious Grand Hotel.[26]
Clark Benedict, Maj. (Station Commander)
Mike Doweling, Capt.
Kenneth Gavin, Lt.
Gordon Halper, Lt. (Physician)
Rupert Lawrence Howard, Lt.
The Outer Limits
Specimen: Unknown (1964), TV
United States Air Force/Department of Space Travel
Project Adonis:
Space station
Shuttlecraft 1010 (Space Shuttle Flight 572-3XA)
Near Future
Space station crew imperiled by deadly alien plants.[27][28]
Zeus IV:
Glyn Williams, Col.
Dan "Bluey" Schultz, Maj.

Zeus V:
Terry Cutler, Lt.
Doctor Who
The Tenth Planet (1966), TV (1976 novel)
International Space Command (ISC):
Zeus IV
Zeus V
December 1986 (2000 in novel)
Astronauts in Earth-orbital spacecraft similar to Gemini. Zeus IV explodes, killing Williams and Schultz; Zeus V had already been launched for rescue attempt.[29][30]
Gary Jason, Col. Jigsaw (1966), comic book series Earth Space Force:
Stargazer One
Contemporary/Near Future
Astronaut injured in space is rescued by aliens and turned into the superhero Jigsaw.[31]
Test Vehicle 1:
Bob Wilson, Maj.
Chip Morton, Lt. Cmdr. (Co-Pilot)

Test Vehicle 2:
Lee Crane, Capt.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Journey With Fear (1967), TV
United States
Space Exploration Agency (SEA):
Test Vehicle 1
Test Vehicle 2
1981
Experimental underwater launch of orbital flight from Seaview by Polaris missile. Test Vehicle 1 is boarded by alien in flight; Test Vehicle 2, with Crane aboard, is snatched at speed of light to alien base on Venus.[32]
Unnamed astronaut Yonggary (1967), film NSRC (Republic of Korea):
Rocket #7X (one-man capsule)
Near Future
Korean astronaut on reconnaissance flight to monitor mid-East nuclear test.[33][34]
Valentina Prokrovna (Russia)

Robert Hamilton (USA)
The Dead Astronaut (1968), short story Unknown Near Future
Two of twelve dead astronauts left orbiting Earth in their respective spacecraft. Hamilton was carrying atomic weapon on military mission.[35][36]
Charles Dreighton [sp.?]

Space station:
Two unnamed astronauts

Supply rocket:
Unnamed astronaut
Joe 90
Most Special Astronaut (1968), TV
O.C.T:[d]
Space station
Supply rocket/Space module
Early 21st century (February)
After supply rocket launch failure, two astronauts are stranded with dwindling air supply on O.C.T. space station commissioned by World Intelligence Network (WIN). Joe 90 comes to the rescue.[37]
P One
Morrison, Col.
Drew, Maj.
Hollis, Capt. (First names not given)

P Two
McCullough, Lt. Col.
Walters, Maj.
Berryman, Capt. (First names not given)
All Judgement Fled (1969), novel Prometheus Project
P One
P Two
Near Future
Astronauts dispatched to make first contact with an alien spacecraft.[38]
Andros V
Unnamed American astronauts

Zond 19
Unnamed Soviet cosmonauts
The Andromeda Strain (1969), novel Andros Project
Andros V

Zond Project
Zond 19
Near Future
Astronauts killed when the Andromeda organism destroys the heat shields of their spacecraft on re-entry.[39]
Bunny
Fred Hoffa
Other unnamed astronauts and technicians
The Long Twilight (1969), novel Unknown Near Future (c. 1996)
Astronauts aboard the United States Weather Satellite, who spot the abrupt beginnings of a hurricane-like storm.[40]
Remus:
Kindle (Captain)
Unnamed stewardess
Governor (Unnamed) (Passenger)
Lavinia Pickerell (Passenger)
11 unnamed passengers

Space station:
Aceworthy, Prof. (Weather department) (No first name given)
Terence (Animal experiments) (no last name given)
Unnamed personnel
Miss Pickerell and the Weather Satellite (1971), novel Tandem Space Shuttle (Booster ship[e]/Remus [Orbital ship])

Space station
Near Future (Late Summer)
Miss Pickerell travels to space station to investigate malfunctioning weather satellite. Sequel to Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars and Miss Pickerell on the Moon (q.v.).[41]
William J. Lardner "Light Verse" (1973), short story Unknown Future (21st century?)
Widow of astronaut Lardner, who sacrificed himself to allow passenger ship to reach Space Station 5, unexpectedly commits murder.[42][43]
Beauregard Jackson Land of the Lost
Hurricane (1974), TV
Hypersonic glider Near Future (c. 1990s)
During reentry, Jackson passes through time window into pocket universe.
William "Buck" Rogers, Capt. Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979–81), TV Ranger 3 1987
NASA astronaut whose voyage in a Space Shuttle-like "deep space probe" results in suspended animation.
Unnamed Mission Specialist/Commander
Vollmer (Engineering/Communications/Weapons) (no first name given)
Human Moments in World War III (1983), short story Colorado Command:
Tomahawk II (Recon-Interceptor)
Near Future
Astronauts in Earth orbit come under control of Colorado Command rather than Houston after outbreak of World War III.[44][45]
Tank Farm:
Ralph Rutter, Dr. (Director)
Don Ishido, Dr. (Communications/Operations Chief)
Susan Sorbanes, Dr. (Business Manager)
Emily Testa (Italy)
Unnamed chief flight controller
Unnamed personnel

Pacifica:
Robert Bahnz, Col. (DOD)
Henry Woke, Dr. (NASA official)
Unnamed astronauts
Tank Farm Dynamo (a.k.a. Tank Farm) (1983), short story Colombo-Carroll Foundation:
Colombo Station (a.k.a. Tank Farm)

NASA:
Space Shuttle
Pacifica
c. 1999
Orbital platform built from Space Shuttle external tanks and run by American-Italian consortium faces takeover bid by US government.[46][47]
Joanne Davis, Maj.[f] (USAF) DEMON-4 (1984), novel NASA
Space Station
Near Future[g]
NASA astronaut who survived the destruction of her space platform during WWIII, reassigned to help in the destruction of a rogue undersea fortress.[48]
Evans (Captain)
Floyd (Engineer)
Grundy (Navigator) (no first names given)
Doctor Who
Search for the Doctor (1986), gamebook
Enterprise 21 space freighter August 2056
Three-man crew returning from satellite servicing mission disappears into Bermuda Triangle.[49]
Frances Reese
Jan DuToit
Bill Noyes
Mary Xu
Valentina Romanova
Mikhail Savchenko
Chuck Wenzel
Anna Cherneva
Yuri Finnegan
John Jackson
Gerry Wolf
Maria Blixen
Bertorelli
Perez
Saha
(First names not given for the last three characters)

Hipparchus Base:
Roger Bryant
Jim Russell
Hyashi Higuchi
Ben Templeton
Greg Able
Double Planet (1988), novel Space Shuttles
Ares I
Ares II
Discovery
Sir Fred Hoyle
Predpriyatie
Tsiolkovski

Moonbase
Hipparchus Base
Near Future
New Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA) astronauts and scientists on a mission to investigate the possibility of mining the Comet Osaki-Mori for resources the ReUnited Nations (RN) needs to rebuild Earth.[50]
Wayfarer 1
Theodore Ludendorff, Cmdr
Five unnamed astronauts

Wayfarer 2
Jake Ryder
Speed Spencer
Faye McFarland
Boris Mechanov
Ada Lin
Irwin Rote

Von Braun
Ki Susato
Unnamed astronauts
Reach (1989), novel Wayfarer Program
Wayfarer 1
Wayfarer 2

Space Station
Von Braun
2037 – 2040
When contact is lost with an expedition to a mysterious cluster of objects passing outside the orbit of Pluto a second expedition is sent to investigate.[51]
Unnamed astronaut The Village...the Village...the Earth...the Earth and the Suicide of the Astronaut (1995), short story "Space corporation" Unknown
After traveling around the Solar System, astronaut is unable to find work back on Earth.[52]
Meridian:
William Clark, Capt.
Helene Dufour, Dr. (France) (Medical Officer)
Lara Nabakov, Cmdr. (Security Officer)
Richard Gordon, Cmdr. (Engineer)
Thomas Somerset, Dr.

Shuttle:
Louis Bidwell (Commander)
Unnamed astronauts
The Outer Limits
Bodies of Evidence (1997), TV
International Space Agency:
UNAS Meridian (space station)
Escape pod
Space shuttle
June 20 – July 2037
Space station commander Clark is accused of murder after Gordon, Somerset and Nabakov die due to hallucinations. Space agency has also attempted to reach outer planets.
Channing Blythe Knowlton Eater (2000), novel NASA c. 2022 (February–July)
Former NASA astronaut dying of cancer volunteers to confront sentient black hole.[53]
Oliver Greenberg
Mike Weissman
Two unnamed astronauts
Open Loops (2000), short story NASA:
Ehricke
Near Future
On mission to Ra-Shalom, Space Shuttle veteran Greenberg becomes the first human to visit an asteroid. Greenberg later spends one million years living on Ra-Shalom while the universe changes around him.[54]
Unnamed astronauts Brando: Carbon Copies (2002), music video Unknown Future
Astronauts building space station to orbit distant planet which resembles Mars.[55]
Antonio (Mexico) (no last name given)
Unnamed astronaut
Will You Be an Astronaut? (2002), short story Space Station Vigilancia Unknown (Alternate History)
In alternate history in which Apollo 11 never returned to Earth, Antonio defends Earth from telepathic entities called Asps.[56][57]
Christopher Goszen The Memory Chamber (2006), short film SpaceCo 2019
Novelist-turned-astronaut confuses memories, dreams and reality while on mission to asteroid.[58]
Two unnamed astronauts An Inconvenient Penguin Death March (2007), short film Unknown Near Future
Astronauts stranded in space as penguins take over world.[59]
Carpathia:
Richard Jacob Johansenn
Susan Kirmatsu (Pilot)
Robbie Hamilton (Co-pilot)
Patricia Mattos (Chief archeologist)
Heidi Vogt (archeologist)
Unnamed astronauts and observers

Deep Space Dart:
Richard J. Johansenn
Mac McFerson
Greg Yovel
Rachel Saunders (Forensic anthropologist)
Helen Dail (Reporter)
Unnamed astronauts
Recovering Apollo 8 (2007), short story Johansenn Interplanetary:
Carpathia (Hawk-class)

Deep Space Dart
2007 (Alternate History)

2018 (Alternate History)

2020 (Alternate History)
In alternate history in which Apollo 8 never returned to Earth, billionaire Johansenn makes it his life's mission to recover the lost spacecraft and its crew. Apollo 20 is mentioned as having crashed into the Moon (no details given).[60][61]
Javier Fonseca, Dr. (Astrogeologist)

Endurance:
Neil Giffords, Dr. (US)
Yuri Semyonov, Dr. (Russia)
Glen Hosey, Dr. (Ireland) (Astrogeologist)
Spacemen Three (2008), short film Endurance (space shuttle) Future
Hosey replaces 11-spaceflight-veteran Fonseca on 24-month mission to gray planet that resembles Mars.[62]
Samuel Sheppard (Captain)
Jackson (Pilot)
Blake Santos, Dr. (Physician)
The Space Between (2009), short film Space Shuttle
Lustria
Near Future
NASA astronauts on nine-year mission using hibernation technology.[63]
NASA:
Robert Danforth (USN)

Freedom:
Holly (Traffic control)
Unnamed personnel

Tri-Star:
Jake
Dan
Unnamed personnel
"Space Hero" (2010), short story NASA:
Space Shuttle
Discovery
Mars One

Soyuz

Freedom (space station)
Tri-Star (space station)
Orbital shuttle
Near Future
NASA astronaut Danforth, who made emergency landing aboard Discovery after launch malfunction, visits commercial space stations, one of which is building spacecraft for first Mars mission.[64][65]
Halcyon:
Arthur
Robert (no last names given)
Capsule (2011), short film NASA:
Orion/Constellation
Halcyon (lander)
Unknown
Two astronauts in Halcyon have landed (possibly on Venus or Mars) and are running out of oxygen. The ending leaves ambiguous whether or not the story is a daydream.[66]
Unnamed cosmonaut (US?) The Cosmonaut (2011), short film Unknown Unknown
Cosmonaut returns from space to find his girlfriend has grown old and died.[67]
Windermere:
David Brock
Craig Swanson, Sqn Ldr (RAF)
Joanna Slade

Jules Verne:
Philippe Lefevre, Commandant
Svenni Nilson
Doctor Who
The Feast of Axos (2011), audio play
Ironclad Industries:
Windermere

Eurozone Space Agency:
Jules Verne (shuttle)
Johann Kepler (shuttle)
c. 2020s[h]
Ironclad Industries attempts to solve Earth's energy problems by accessing energy from the alien parasite Axos.[68]
Markus Samuel Ditto, Cmdr. Imprint (2011), short film GSI:
Eco Mission (Space Shuttle)
Near Future
Astronaut creates holographic replica of himself rather than his wife as companion for journey beyond Mars.[69]
Galenka Makarova (Pilot)
Dimitri Ivanov (Data acquisition and transmission)
Yakov Demin (Flight systems specialist)
Troika (2011), novella Tereshkova
Soyuz re-entry vehicle
2039
Cosmonauts from revived Soviet Union investigate mysterious artifact in space. Tereshkova has VASIMIR drive.[70]
Oscar Homeslice The Ballad of Oscar Homeslice (2012), short film Unknown Contemporary
Legendary astronaut inspires young man to realize he is a hippogriff.[71]
Phoebe base (2020):
Lyman Hsu (Station Chief)
Tina "Tiny" Lundgren (Deputy Station Chief)
Gabriel Campbell (Geologist)
Thaddeus Stankiewicz (Engineer)
Bryce Lewis
Alan Childs
Unnamed personnel

Phoebe base (2023):
Irv Weingart (Station Chief)
Thaddeus Stankiewicz (Deputy Station Chief)
Dino Agnelli (Electrical engineer)
Jarred Finnegan (Base mechanic)
Chuck (no last name given)
11 unnamed personnel

PS-1 Independent Inspection Team:
Marcus Judson (NASA contractor)
Olivia Finch, Prof. (Quality assurance engineer)
Savannah "Savvy" Morgan (USAF, civilian) (Computer security engineer)
Reuben Swenson (Department of Energy) (Power systems engineer)
Energized (2012), novel NASA:

Phoebe base
Powersat One (PS-1)
February 22, 2020

April 10 – November 4, 2023
When asteroid Phoebe approaches Earth, NASA captures it and places it in Earth orbit to investigate its resources. Stankiewicz is blackmailed into secret project, leading to his murdering Campbell during EVA on Phoebe to avoid discovery. Three years later, inspection team investigates newly constructed powersat.[72]
Thom (Netherlands?) (no last name given) Tears of Steel (2012), short film Unknown Future
Thom's decision to become an astronaut causes his girlfriend Celia to create killer robots that take over the world. Remade in Chinese in 2013.[73][74]
Charlotte Hayden, Dr. (Senior Mission Commander)
Jack Overholt, Col. (Military Commander)
Gabriel Drum, Maj. (Military Executive Officer)
Alberto Gomez, Lt. (Physician)
Manesh Kalani, Dr. (Linguist/Computer Specialist)
Donald "Pritch" Pritchard, Dr. (Chief Astronomer)
Cary Rowan, Dr. (Geologist)
Kyoko Takahashi,[i] Dr. (Physician)
John S. Willett, Sgt. (OSCAR Corps) (Chief Engineer)
Letter 44 (2013– ), comic book series Project Monolith (US):
USS Clarke
Bowman (shuttle)
c. 2009
Astronauts on secret mission to investigate alien artifact in asteroid belt. Drum, Gomez and Pritchard discover lush artificial environment on 730 Athanasia.[75][76]
Jack Corben, Capt. Superman Family Adventures
The Menace of Metallo! (2013), comic book
Unknown (United States) Contemporary/Near Future
Astronaut transformed into super-villain Metallo by encounter with kryptonite asteroids.[j][77][78]
Katie Sparks
Blair Taylor
Marcus Dawkins

Seraphim:
Harmon Kryger

Seraphim:
Molly Woods
Extant (2014–15), TV International Space Exploration Agency (ISEA):
Space Station
Seraphim
Near Future (2030s/2040s)
Woods returns from 13-month solo mission to find herself pregnant. Sparks, Taylor and Dawkins are deceased; Kryger was believed to have committed suicide after mysterious solar flare incident.[79]
Walsh, Dr. (Commander)
Tom Compton, Ph.D. (Pilot)
Bartholomew Alan "Berg" Bergen, Ph.D. (Engineer)
Ronald Gibbs, Ph.D.
Jane Augusta Holloway, Ph.D. (Linguist)
Ajaya Varma, M.D. (Flight Surgeon)
Fluency (2014), novel NASA
Alpha Mission:
Providence
Future (21st century)
Astronauts dock with alien spacecraft discovered by Mariner 4 in 1964 and monitored by NASA ever since. Gibbs is an ISS veteran.[80]
Nebulon "Lon" Innes Airtight (2015), short story Bezospace:
MK212
Future (after 2035)
Former lunar ferry pilot stakes claim to minor planet in order to sell it to corporation. MK212 spacecraft described as "second-generation Dragon capsule".[81]
Dark Sky Station:
Felix (Detective)
Aouda (Flight Chief)
Charlie (Maintenance)
Unnamed personnel

Orbital ascender:
Unnamed pilot
Unnamed flight engineer
Phil Foggerty (Passenger)
John Keyes (Passenger)
Around The NEO in 80 Days (2015), short story Dark Sky Station (DSS) (Inflatable space habitat)
2 orbital ascenders (Space balloons)
Future
Adventurer Foggerty and valet Keyes attempt to win bet by flying around near-Earth object.[82]
Chinese spacecraft:
Song-li "Song" Chunxi

Private spacecraft:
Sam Gunn
Rare (Off) Earth Elements (A Sam Gunn Tale) (2015), short story People's Republic of China

Private spacecraft (fusion propulsion)
Future
Taikonaut travels to asteroid 94-12 to claim its resources for China, only to find Sam Gunn already there.[83]
Unnamed astronaut Re-Entry (2015), short film NASA:
Eon One
Future
Female astronaut caught in fatal time loop after re-entry.
Kenna Belecky (Outer Space Technician)
Nick (Outer Space Technician) (no last name given)
Ten Days Up (2015), short story McCormick-Dewey International:
McCormick-Dewey ground-to-orbit lifting conduit ("the EL") (Space elevator)
Future
Solar flares hit space elevator train while "ostech" Belecky is performing EVA. Haley Wu is mentioned as having been the first human on Mars.[84]
Tombaugh One/Tombaugh Station:
James Dayton (Commander)
Kate Beck (Executive Officer)
Tadeo "Cookie" Atsuka, Dr. (Data Analytics and Imaging)
Elise Kenyata, Dr. (Geo-planetologist/Medical Officer)
Robinson
Tucker (no first names given for last two)
Tombaugh Station (2015), short story Corporate:
Tombaugh One
Tombaugh Two
Tombaugh Three
Tombaugh Station
Future
Mysterious deaths on Pluto prior to completion of Venetia Burney Deep Space Cassegrain Telescope.[85]
Tyrille Smith A Walkabout Amongst The Stars (2015), short story Venturer 2035
When Voyager 1 mysteriously reactivates, Aboriginal Australian astronaut is sent on NASA/international mission to investigate. Venturer consists of seven nuclear electric propulsion modules.[86]
Space Now:
Malcolm Pennington (Founder)

NASA:
Dennis Locke[k] (Program Director)

Cronus candidates:
Barney
Peter Jensen (UK) (Space Now)
Meredith Korman (call sign Braniac) (Theoretical physicist)
Stephen Miller (EU)
Eleven unnamed candidates

First Cronus mission:
Jason "Ace" McCoy (NASA) (Commander)
Hemi "Thor" (NASA) (Second-in-command)
Antonio Curzon (call sign Playboy) (Space Now) (Payload Specialist)
Isabelle Wolsten (call sign Bombshell) (NASA) (Payload Specialist)
Bomber
Vicki Crum
Hennessey (Theoretical physicist)
Lourdes
Mike
Dean Winters (call sign Frosty)

Second Cronus mission:
Velosi (call sign Velocity) (NASA) (Commander)
Nine other astronauts
Beyond the Limits (2017), novel NASA/Space Now/International programs:
Cronus program (Shuttle/Space station)
Near Future (April – June)
Astronauts competing for slots on missions to build way station between Earth and Mars. Wolsten and Crum are ISS veterans. Billionaire Pennington attempted rendezvous with satellite aboard solar balloon, then set space diving world record on way down.[87]
Jacob Lawson (Satellite designer)
Ute Fassbinder (Space station commander)
Geostorm (2017), film Space station Near Future
Engineer Lawson on climate-control satellite repair mission.[88][89][90][91]
Magellan:
Roger Nelson, Capt. (USAF) (Commander)

CNSA:
Three unnamed taikonauts
Magellan (a.k.a. Messenger) (2017), film NASA:
X-57 (IC Magellan)

CNSA:
Unknown spacecraft
Future (21st century)
NASA astronaut on mission to find alien transmitters on Titan, Triton and Eris. Landing on Titan near Punga Mare. X-57 lander is a VTOL spaceplane.[92]
Planetary Resources and Exploration:
Hiroshi Nevitt

Barrick-Vale:
Theresa (no last name given)
"To Lose the Stars" (2017), short story Planetary Resources and Exploration

Barrick-Vale Mining and Exploration Corporation
2047

Late 21st century
On solo survey expedition in the asteroid belt, Brazilian freelance surveyor Theresa discovers the dead body of legendary surveyor Nevitt.[93]
Cloverfield Space Station:
Kiel (NASA/US) (Commander)
Ava Hamilton (ESA/UK) (Com officer)
Schmidt (ESA/Germany) (Physicist)
"Volky" Volkov (Russia)
"Monk" Acosta (Brazilian Space Agency) (Physician)
Tam (China) (Shepard engineer)
Mundy (ESA/Italy)

Alternate universe crew:
Mina Jensen (Shepard engineer)
The Cloverfield Paradox (2018), film Cloverfield Space Station:
Helios mission
Future
Astronauts using Shepard Accelerator in attempt to solve energy crisis find that Earth has disappeared after accelerator test.[94]
Ferris 6:
Amy Seaton (Captain)
Unnamed communications tech

Lander 1:
Henson
Durand (no first names given)

Lander 2:
Harold "Hal" Jordan
Volkov (no first name given)
Green Lantern: Earth One
Volume One (2018), graphic novel
Ferris Galactic:
Ferris 6 Monarcha Energy Palladium Mining Expedition
Lander 1
Lander 2
Contemporary/Near Future (Earth One)
Asteroid miners who discover Green Lantern power ring and battery in asteroid belt. Jordan is a former NASA astronaut who worked on the Arrowhead project, an orbital launching station used as a missile platform.[95]
Stillness:
Luckett "Lucky" Newman

Cobalt Hill Inc
"Cappies":
Althea "Thea" (no last name given)
Isabella Desrosiers
Hiro (no last name given)
Charlotte Pontchartrain
Valer "Val" Simpson
"Shepherd Moon" (2018), short story NASA:
Stillness

Cobalt Hill Inc
Capsules:
Atlas
Hercules
McQueen
Spacey McSpaceface
Summit
Future (October)
On her forty-first mission, "cappy" Thea flies capsule Summit to recover body of NASA astronaut Newman, her ex-boyfriend, killed in EVA accident on spaceflight in geosynchronous orbit. "Capsules" are small spacecraft used by private spaceflight industry.[96]
Gang Lu (Captain)
Unnamed astronauts
Restart (2019), short film Spaceship Star Zoo April 12, 2052
Spacecraft is pulled through wormhole that appears in nuclear waste yard at Lagrange point, traveling to April 12 in the year 10,200,003,275. Star Zoo receives a transmission from Jiu Quan Space Command Center. Adapted from short story "Lagrange Cemetery" by Wang Jinkang.[97]

Notes

  1. ^ An earlier version of the game by Brian Moriarty featured an additional character named Toshi Olema, a paying passenger on the mission.[8]
  2. ^ Stated to be a "two-star general" (p. 13) and a "Brigadier General" (a one-star rank) (p. 204).
  3. ^ References to lunar bases and an expedition to Titania suggest the story is set in the 21st Century rather than the 20th.
  4. ^ The acronym "O.T.C." appears on the space station and rocket models.
  5. ^ Not stated to be a crewed booster.
  6. ^ Promoted to Lt Col. at the novel's conclusion.
  7. ^ Exact year is not specified, but references to extensive orbital infrastructure suggest a time in the late 20th/early 21st C relative to the date of publication.
  8. ^ The story is set fifty years after The Claws of Axos.
  9. ^ Incorrectly named "Kyoko Takamura" in Volume 1 crew portrait caption (p. 155).
  10. ^ This origin story for Metallo differs from other versions, in which Corben is not an astronaut. See the Metallo article.
  11. ^ Not explicitly stated to be an astronaut.

See also

List of fictional astronauts (exploration of outer Solar System)

References

  1. ^ Fredriksen, John C. (2013). Men Into Space. BearManor Media. pp. 81–86. ISBN 978-1-59393-231-2.
  2. ^ Westfahl, Gary (2012). The Spacesuit Film: A History, 1918–1969. McFarland & Company. pp. 216–219. ISBN 978-0-7864-4267-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  3. ^ Scheib, Richard. "The Green Slime (1968)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  4. ^ Baxter, John (1978). The Hermes Fall. Granada (Panther). ISBN 0-586-04610-0.
  5. ^ Fodor, R. V.; Taylor, G. J. (1979). Impact!. Leisure Books. ISBN 978-0725506049.
  6. ^ Hazy, Mike (November 23, 1984). "Visitors From Earth". He-Man and the Masters of the Universe. Season 2. Episode 119.
  7. ^ Foster, Alan Dean (1995). The Dig. Based on a story by Sean Clark. Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-51853-0.
  8. ^ García, Paco (March 2006). "Interview with Brian Moriarty". Aventura y CÍA. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  9. ^ Scheib, Richard. "Armageddon (1998)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  10. ^ Scheib, Richard. "Deep Impact (1998)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  11. ^ Napier, Bill (1998). Nemesis. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-93680-X.
  12. ^ Niven, Larry; Harrington, Matthew Joseph (2013). The Goliath Stone. Tor Books. ISBN 978-0-7653-3323-0.
  13. ^ Scheib, Richard. "Age of Tomorrow (2014)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
  14. ^ Priest; Illidge, Joseph Phillip (2017). "The Event". Life After the Fallout. Catalyst Prime: Superb. Vol. 1. Illustrated by Marco Turini and Will Rosado. Lion Forge Comics. ISBN 978-1-941302-40-8.
  15. ^ Westfahl 2012, pp. 54–73
  16. ^ Fredriksen, John C. (2013). Men Into Space. BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1-59393-231-2.
  17. ^ William Marshall (Director) (1961). The Phantom Planet (Motion picture). Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  18. ^ Warren, Bill (2010). Keep Watching the Skies! American Science Fiction Movies of the Fifties. McFarland & Company. pp. 658–662. ISBN 978-1-4766-6618-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  19. ^ Westfahl 2012, pp. 113–115
  20. ^ Scheib, Richard. "The Phantom Planet (1961)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  21. ^ Ballard, J. G. (1962). "The Cage of Sand". New Worlds.
  22. ^ Ballard, J. G. (2009). The Complete Stories of J. G. Ballard. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 355–372. ISBN 978-0-393-07262-4.
  23. ^ Something Weird Space – Colormation Screen Test. 1962. Retrieved May 1, 2017.
  24. ^ Leiber, Fritz (September 1962). "The Snowbank Orbit". If.
  25. ^ Hoyle, Fred; Hoyle, Geoffrey (1963). Fifth Planet. Harper & Row. LCCN 63-20284.
  26. ^ Gian Carlo Menotti (Composer/Director) (March 3, 1963). Labyrinth (Motion picture). Retrieved March 20, 2020.
  27. ^ Schow, David J.; Frentzen, Jeffrey (1986). The Outer Limits: The Official Companion. Ace Books. pp. 112–116. ISBN 0-441-37081-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  28. ^ Westfahl 2012, pp. 200–202
  29. ^ Howe, David J.; Stammers, Mark; Walker, Stephen James (1994). Doctor Who The Handbook – The First Doctor. Doctor Who Books. pp. 136–139. ISBN 0-426-20430-1.
  30. ^ Davis, Gerry (2012). Doctor Who and the Tenth Planet. BBC Books. ISBN 978-1-849-90474-2.
  31. ^ Morris 2015, pp. 158–159
  32. ^ Weiss, Arthur (October 15, 1967). "Journey With Fear". Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. Season 4. Episode 4. ABC. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  33. ^ Kim Ki-duk (Director) (1967). Yongary Monster From the Deep (Motion picture). Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  34. ^ Westfahl 2012, pp. 286–287
  35. ^ Ballard, J. G. (May 1968). "The Dead Astronaut". Playboy.
  36. ^ Ballard, J. G. (2009). The Complete Stories of J. G. Ballard. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 760–768. ISBN 978-0-393-07262-4.
  37. ^ Barwick, Tony (October 6, 1968). "Most Special Astronaut". Joe 90. Episode 2. ATV. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
  38. ^ White, James (1969). All Judgement Fled. Ballantine Books. ISBN 9780345020161.
  39. ^ Crichton, Michael (1969). The Andromeda Strain. Triad Granada (Panther). ISBN 0-586-05045-0.
  40. ^ Laumer, Keith (1969). The Long Twilight. Berkley Books. ISBN 978-0441489282.
  41. ^ MacGregor, Ellen; Pantell, Dora (1971). Miss Pickerell and the Weather Satellite. Illustrated by Charles Geer. McGraw-Hill Book Company. ISBN 0-07-044570-2.
  42. ^ Asimov, Isaac (September–October 1973). "Light Verse". The Saturday Evening Post.
  43. ^ Asimov, Isaac (1975). "Light Verse". Buy Jupiter and Other Stories. Doubleday & Company. pp. 201–205. ISBN 0-385-05077-1.
  44. ^ DeLillo, Don (July 1983). "Human Moments in World War III". Esquire.
  45. ^ DeLillo, Don (2011). The Angel Esmeralda Nine Stories. Scribner. pp. 25–44. ISBN 978-1-4516-5584-1.
  46. ^ Brin, David (November 1983). "Tank Farm Dynamo". Analog Science Fiction & Fact.
  47. ^ Brin, David (2000). "Tank Farm". In Benford, Gregory; Zebrowski, George (eds.). Skylife: Space Habitats in Story and Science. Harcourt. pp. 77–95. ISBN 0-15-100292-4.
  48. ^ Mace, David (1984). DEMON-4. Grafton. ISBN 0-586-05855-9.
  49. ^ Martin, David (1986). Search for the Doctor. Make Your Own Adventure with Doctor Who. Severn House. ISBN 0-7278-2087-7.
  50. ^ Gribbin, John; Chown, Marcus (1989). Double Planet. VGSF. ISBN 0-575-04599-X.
  51. ^ Gibson, Edward (1989). Reach. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-26150-0.
  52. ^ "Books By Muammar Al Gaddafi – Suicide of the Astronaut". AlGaddafi.org. Retrieved April 16, 2016.
  53. ^ Benford, Gregory (2000). Eater. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-380-97436-3.
  54. ^ Baxter, Stephen (2000). "Open Loops". In Benford, Gregory; Zebrowski, George (eds.). Skylife: Space Habitats in Story and Science. Harcourt. pp. 241–268. ISBN 0-15-100292-4.
  55. ^ Jim Granato (Writer/Director) (2001). Brando "Carbon Copies" (Music video). Retrieved May 2, 2017.
  56. ^ van Eekhout, Greg (September 2002). "Will You Be an Astronaut?". The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction.
  57. ^ van Eekhout, Greg (2003). "Will You Be an Astronaut?". In Nielsen Hayden, Patrick (ed.). New Skies: An Anthology of Today's Science Fiction. Tor Books. pp. 157–167. ISBN 0-765-30016-8.
  58. ^ John Ziniewicz (Writer/Director) (2006). The Memory Chamber (Motion picture). John Ziniewicz. Retrieved May 2, 2017.
  59. ^ Breean Hougesen and Dave Bedrich (Writers/Directors) (2007). An Inconvenient Penguin Death March (Motion picture). Retrieved May 2, 2017.
  60. ^ Rusch, Kristine Kathryn (February 2007). "Recovering Apollo 8". Asimov's Science Fiction.
  61. ^ Rusch, Kristine Kathryn (2010). Recovering Apollo 8 and Other Stories. Golden Gryphon Press. pp. 3–60. ISBN 978-1-930846-62-3.
  62. ^ Hugh O'Conor (Director/Co-Writer) (2008). Spacemen Three (Motion picture). Hugh O'Conor. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  63. ^ Keros Lowder (Writer/Director) (2009). The Space Between (Motion picture). Retrieved May 8, 2017.
  64. ^ Lundrigan, Patrick (2010). "Space Hero". Baen.com. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  65. ^ Lundrigan, Patrick (2017). "Space Hero". In Ledbetter, William (ed.). The Jim Baen Memorial Award: The First Decade. Baen Books. pp. 55–67. ISBN 978-1-4814-8281-3.
  66. ^ Antonio Altamirano (Writer/Director) (2011). Capsule (Motion picture). Ancient Mariner Pictures. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
  67. ^ David Altrogge (Director/Co-Writer) (2011). The Cosmonaut (Motion picture). Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  68. ^ Maddox, Mike (2011). The Feast of Axos. Doctor Who. Big Finish Productions. ISBN 978-1-84435-544-0.
  69. ^ J. Ambrus (Writer/Producer/Director) (2011). IMPRINT (Director's Cut) (Motion picture). Retrieved May 8, 2017.
  70. ^ Reynolds, Alastair (2011). Troika. Subterranean Press. ISBN 978-1-59606-376-1.
  71. ^ Ted Kindig (Writer/Producer/Director) (2012). The Ballad of Oscar Homeslice (Motion picture). Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  72. ^ Lerner, Edward M. (2012). Energized. Tor Books. ISBN 978-0-7653-2849-6.
  73. ^ Ian Hubert (Writer/Director) (September 26, 2012). Tears of Steel (Motion picture). Blender Foundation. Retrieved November 12, 2015.
  74. ^ Tears of Steel (Motion picture) (in Chinese). Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Automation (CASIA). September 12, 2013. Retrieved November 12, 2015.
  75. ^ Soule, Charles (2014). Escape Velocity. Letter 44. Vol. 1. Art by Alberto Jiménez Alburquerque. Oni Press. ISBN 978-1-62010-133-9.
  76. ^ Soule, Charles (2015). Redshift. Letter 44. Vol. 2. Art by Alberto Jiménez Alburquerque. Oni Press. ISBN 978-1-62010-206-0.
  77. ^ Baltazar, Art; Franco (2013). "The Menace of Metallo!". Superman Family Adventures (6). DC Comics.
  78. ^ Baltazar, Art; Franco (2013). The Menace of Metallo!. Superman Family Adventures. Stone Arch Books. ISBN 978-1-4342-4794-0.
  79. ^ "Extant" (DOC) (Press release). CBS. March 2014. Retrieved July 18, 2014.
  80. ^ Wells, Jennifer Foehner (2014). Fluency. Confluence. Vol. Book One. Blue Bedlam Books. ISBN 978-0-9904798-1-9.
  81. ^ Capobianco, Michael (2015). "Airtight". In Schmidt, Bryan Thomas (ed.). Mission: Tomorrow. Baen Books. pp. 163–173. ISBN 978-1-4767-8094-8.
  82. ^ Werkheiser, Jay (2015). "Around The NEO in 80 Days". In Schmidt, Bryan Thomas (ed.). Mission: Tomorrow. Baen Books. pp. 129–147. ISBN 978-1-4767-8094-8.
  83. ^ Bova, Ben (2015). "Rare (Off) Earth Elements (A Sam Gunn Tale)". In Schmidt, Bryan Thomas (ed.). Mission: Tomorrow. Baen Books. pp. 287–301. ISBN 978-1-4767-8094-8.
  84. ^ Chen, Curtis C. (2015). "Ten Days Up". In Schmidt, Bryan Thomas (ed.). Mission: Tomorrow. Baen Books. pp. 239–258. ISBN 978-1-4767-8094-8.
  85. ^ Bailey, Robin Wayne (2015). "Tombaugh Station". In Schmidt, Bryan Thomas (ed.). Mission: Tomorrow. Baen Books. pp. 3–15. ISBN 978-1-4767-8094-8.
  86. ^ Robyn, Lezli (2015). "A Walkabout Amongst The Stars". In Schmidt, Bryan Thomas (ed.). Mission: Tomorrow. Baen Books. pp. 47–60. ISBN 978-1-4767-8094-8.
  87. ^ Garbera, Katherine (2017). Beyond the Limits. Harlequin Blaze. Vol. 942. Harlequin Enterprises. ISBN 978-0-373-79968-8.
  88. ^ Kit, Borys (August 15, 2014). "Jim Sturgess, Abbie Cornish in Talks to Join Gerard Butler in 'Geostorm' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  89. ^ Sneider, Jeff (August 19, 2014). "'Rush' Star Alexandra Maria Lara Joins Gerard Butler in 'Geostorm' (Exclusive)". TheWrap. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  90. ^ Yamato, Jen (September 26, 2014). "Katheryn Winnick Boards WB and Skydance's 'Geostorm'". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
  91. ^ Scheib, Richard (December 3, 2017). "Geostorm (2017)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  92. ^ Zelen, Ren (May 2017). "Sci-Fi-London Film Festival 2017 Review MAGELLAN". The Movie Waffler. Retrieved April 23, 2018.
  93. ^ Brozek, Jennifer (2017). "To Lose the Stars". In Ledbetter, William (ed.). The Jim Baen Memorial Award: The First Decade. Baen Books. pp. 277–288. ISBN 978-1-4814-8281-3.
  94. ^ Scheib, Richard (February 17, 2018). "The Cloverfield Paradox (2018)". Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
  95. ^ Bechko, Corinna; Hardman, Gabriel (2018). Green Lantern: Earth One. Vol. One. Art by Gabriel Hardman. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-4012-4186-5.
  96. ^ Mohamed, Premee (September–October 2018). "Shepherd Moon". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. CXXXVIII (9 & 10): 97–105.
  97. ^ Gang Yu, Yi Chen (Directors) (2019). Restart (Motion picture). TimeMax. Retrieved January 30, 2021.