List of Solar System probes
This is a list of all space probes that have left Earth, or were launched with that intention but failed, organised by target. It includes planetary probes, lunar probes, solar probes and probes to asteroids and comets. Flybys, including terrestrial, (such as gravity assists) incidental to the main purpose of the mission are also listed. Confirmed future probes are included, but missions still at the concept stage, or which never progressed beyond the concept stage, are not.
Key
- Grey shading indicates a successful or partly successful mission
- † means "tentatively identified", as classified by NASA [1]. These are Cold War-era Soviet missions, mostly failures, about which few or no details have been officially released. The information given may be speculative.
- Type is one of:
- flyby – the spacecraft is to fly past its target
- orbiter – the spacecraft is to study the target from orbit
- lander – the spacecraft is to study the target on its surface
- impactor – the spacecraft is to study the target until it hits the target and is destroyed
- penetrator – the spacecraft is to penetrate the surface of the target
- atmospheric probe/balloon – the spacecraft is to study the atmosphere of the target
- sample return – the spacecraft is to return samples to the Earth
- Date is the date of:
- closest encounter (flybys)
- impact (impactors)
- orbital insertion to end of mission, whether planned or premature (orbiters)
- landing to end of mission, whether planned or premature (landers)
- launch (missions that never got underway due to failure at or soon after launch)
- In cases which do not fit any of the above, the event to which the date refers is stated. Note that as a result of this scheme missions are not always listed in order of launch.
- Under Status:
- success means that the mission fulfilled its primary goals. In the case of flybys (such as gravity assists) that are incidental to the main mission, "success" indicates the successful completion of the flyby, not necessarily that of the main mission.
- partial success means that the mission fulfilled some but not all of its primary goals
- failure means that the mission did not fulfil any of its primary goals
- Other entries are self-explanatory.
Solar probes
These are solar observation probes designed to operate in heliocentric orbit or at one of the Earth-Sun Lagrangian points. The list excludes Earth-orbiting solar observatories.
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pioneer 5 | NASA/ DOD |
March–April 1960 | orbiter | success | measured magnetic field phenomena, solar flare particles, and ionization in the interplanetary region | File:Pioneer 5.jpg | [2] | |
Pioneer 6 | NASA | December 1965 – still contactable in 2000 | orbiter | success | network of solar-orbiting "space weather" monitors, observing solar wind, cosmic rays, and magnetic fields | [3] | ||
Pioneer 7 | NASA | August 1966 – still contactable in 1995 | orbiter | success | [4] | |||
Pioneer 8 | NASA | December 1967 – still contactable in 2001 | orbiter | success | [5] | |||
Pioneer 9 | NASA | November 1968 – May 1983 | orbiter | success | [6] | |||
Pioneer-E | NASA | 27 August, 1969 | orbiter | failure | intended as part of the Pioneer 6–9 network; failed to reach orbit | [7] | ||
Helios 1 | NASA/ BWF |
November 1974 – 1982 | orbiter | success | observations of solar wind, magnetic and electric fields, cosmic rays and cosmic dust between Earth and Sun | [8] | ||
Helios 2 | NASA/ BWF |
January 1976 – 1985? | orbiter | success | [9] | |||
ISEE-3 | NASA | 1978–1982 | orbiter | success | observed solar phenomena in conjunction with earth-orbiting ISEE-1 and ISEE-2; later renamed International Cometary Explorer (ICE) and directed to Comet Giacobini-Zinner | [10] | ||
Ulysses (first pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
1994 | orbiter | success | south polar observations | [11] | ||
1995 | north polar observations | |||||||
WIND | NASA | November 1994 — still active (as of July 2007) | orbiter | success | solar wind measurements | [12] | ||
SOHO | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
May 1996 – still active (as of June 2007) | orbiter | success | investigation of Sun's core, corona, and solar wind | File:SOHO instruments pnggray 300.png | [13] | |
ACE | NASA | August 1997 – still active (as of February 2007) | orbiter | success | solar wind observations | [14] | ||
Ulysses (second pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
2000 | orbiter | success | south polar observations | [15] | ||
2001 | north polar observations | |||||||
Genesis | NASA | 2001–2004 | orbiter/ sample return |
partial success | solar wind sample return; crash landed on return to Earth, some samples salvaged | [16] | ||
STEREO A | NASA | December 2006 – planned 2 year mission | orbiter | operational | stereoscopic imaging of coronal mass ejections and other solar phenomena | [17] | ||
STEREO B | NASA | December 2006 – planned 2 year mission | orbiter | operational | [18] | |||
Ulysses (third pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
2007 | orbiter | success | south polar observations | [19] | ||
2008 | yet to arrive | north polar observations | ||||||
Solar Sentinels | NASA | multi-probe orbiter | planned | six probes watching the sun | [20] | |||
Solar Orbiter | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 2015 | orbiter | planned | close-range solar observations | [21] | ||
Solar Probe | NASA | orbiter | under study | close-range coronal observations | [22] |
Mercury probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mariner 10 | NASA | March 29, 1974 | flyby | success | minimum distance 704 km | [23] | ||
September 21, 1974 | 48,069 km | |||||||
March 16, 1975 | 327 km | |||||||
MESSENGER | NASA | January 15, 2008 | flyby | yet to arrive | planned minimum distance 200 km | [24] | ||
October 6, 2008 | flyby | |||||||
September 30, 2009 | flyby | |||||||
March 18, 2011 – March, 2012 |
orbiter | |||||||
BepiColombo | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ JAXA |
2019 | File:Bepicolumbo.jpg | [25] | ||||
Mercury Planetary Orbiter |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | orbiter | under construction | |||||
Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter |
JAXA | orbiter | under construction |
Venus probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sputnik 7 | (USSR) | February 4, 1961 | lander | failure | failed to escape from Earth orbit | [26] | ||
Venera 1 | (USSR) | May 19, 1961 – May 20, 1961 |
flyby | failure | contact lost 7 days after launch; first spacecraft to fly by another planet | [27] | ||
Mariner 1 | NASA | July 22, 1962 | flyby | failure | guidance failure shortly after launch | [28] | ||
Sputnik 19 | (USSR) | August 25, 1962 | lander | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [29] | ||
Sputnik 20 | (USSR) | September 1, 1962 | lander | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [30] | ||
Sputnik 21 | (USSR) | September 12, 1962 | flyby | failure | third stage exploded | [31] | ||
Mariner 2 | NASA | December 14, 1962 | flyby | success | first successful Venus flyby; minimum distance 34,773 km | [32] | ||
Cosmos 21† | (USSR) | November 11, 1963 | flyby? | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [33] | ||
Venera 1964A† | (USSR) | February 19, 1964 | flyby | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [34] | ||
Venera 1964B† | (USSR) | March 1, 1964 | flyby | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [35] | ||
Cosmos 27 | (USSR) | March 27, 1964 | flyby | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [36] | ||
Zond 1 | (USSR) | 1964 | flyby and possible lander | failure | contact lost en route | File:Zond 1.jpg | [37] | |
Cosmos 96 | (USSR) | November 23, 1965 | lander | failure | exploded? | [38] | ||
Venera 1965A† | (USSR) | November 26, 1965 | flyby | failure | launch vehicle failure? | [39] | ||
Venera 2 | (USSR) | February 27, 1966 | flyby | failure | ceased to operate en route | [40] | ||
Venera 3 | (USSR) | March 1, 1966 | lander | failure | contact lost before arrival; first spacecraft to impact on the surface of another planet | [41] | ||
Cosmos 167 | (USSR) | June 17, 1967 | lander | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [42] | ||
Venera 4 | (USSR) | October 18, 1967 | atmospheric probe | success | continued to transmit to an altitude of 25 km | [43] | ||
Mariner 5 | NASA | October 19, 1967 | flyby | success | minimum distance 5,000 km | [44] | ||
Venera 5 | (USSR) | May 16, 1969 | atmospheric probe | success | [45] | |||
Venera 6 | (USSR) | May 17, 1969 | atmospheric probe | success | [46] | |||
Cosmos 359 | (USSR) | August 22, 1970 | lander? | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [47] | ||
Venera 7 | (USSR) | December 15, 1970 | lander | success | first successful landing on another planet; signals returned from surface for 23 minutes | File:Venera 7 capsule.jpg | [48] | |
Cosmos 482 | (USSR) | March 31, 1972 | lander? | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [49] | ||
Venera 8 | (USSR) | July 22, 1972 | lander | success | signals returned from surface for 50 minutes | File:Venera 8.jpg | [50] | |
Mariner 10 | NASA | February 5, 1974 | flyby | success | minimum distance 5768 km, en route to Mercury; first use of gravity assist by an interplanetary spacecraft | [51] | ||
Venera 9 | (USSR) | 1975 | orbiter | success | File:Venera 9 orbiter.jpg | [52] | ||
October 22, 1975 | lander | success | first images from the surface | File:Venera 9 lander.jpg | [53] | |||
Venera 10 | (USSR) | 1975 | orbiter | success | File:Venera 10 orbiter.jpg | [54] | ||
October 23, 1975 | lander | success | [55] | |||||
Pioneer Venus Orbiter | NASA | December 4, 1978 – 1992 |
orbiter | success | [56] | |||
Pioneer Venus Multiprobe | NASA | December 9, 1978 | ||||||
bus | probe transporter | success | [57] | |||||
large probe | atmospheric probe | success | File:Largevenusprobe.gif | [58] | ||||
north probe | atmospheric probe | success | [59] | |||||
day probe | atmospheric probe | success | survived impact and continued to transmit from surface for over an hour | [60] | ||||
night probe | atmospheric probe | success | [61] | |||||
Venera 12 | SAS | |||||||
flight platform | December 21, 1978 | flyby | success | minimum distance 34,000 km | [62] | |||
descent craft | December 21, 1978 | lander | partial success | failure of some instruments | File:Venera 11 lander.jpg | [63] | ||
Venera 11 | SAS | |||||||
flight platform | December 25, 1978 | flyby | success | minimum distance 34,000 km | [64] | |||
descent craft | December 25, 1978 | lander | partial success | failure of some instruments | File:Venera 11 lander.jpg | [65] | ||
Venera 13 | SAS | |||||||
bus | March 1, 1982 | flyby | success | File:Venera 13 orbiter.gif | [66] | |||
descent craft | March 1, 1982 | lander | success | survived on surface for 127 minutes | File:Venera 13 lander.gif | [67] | ||
Venera 14 | SAS | |||||||
bus | March 5, 1982 | flyby | success | File:Venera 13 orbiter.gif | [68] | |||
descent craft | March 5, 1982 | lander | success | survived on surface for 57 minutes | File:Venera 13 lander.gif | [69] | ||
Venera 15 | SAS | 1983–1984 | orbiter | success | radar mapping | File:Venera 15.gif | [70] | |
Venera 16 | SAS | 1983–1984 | orbiter | success | radar mapping | File:Venera 15.gif | [71] | |
Vega 1 | SAS | June 11, 1985 | flyby | success | went on to fly by Halley's comet | File:Vega 1-2.jpg | [72] | |
lander | failure | instruments deployed prematurely | File:Vega lander.jpg | [73] | ||||
atmospheric balloon | success | File:Vega balloon gondola.jpg | [74] | |||||
Vega 2 | SAS | June 15, 1985 | flyby | success | went on to fly by Halley's comet | File:Vega 1-2.jpg | [75] | |
lander | success | File:Vega lander.jpg | [76] | |||||
atmospheric balloon | success | File:Vega balloon gondola.jpg | [77] | |||||
Galileo | NASA | February 10, 1990 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Jupiter; minimum distance 16,000 km | File:Galileo preparations.jpg | [78] | |
Magellan | NASA | August 10, 1990 – October 12, 1994 |
orbiter | success | global radar mapping | [79] | ||
Cassini | NASA/ File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ ASI |
April 26, 1998 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Saturn | [80] | ||
June 24, 1999 | ||||||||
Venus Express | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | April 11, 2006 – still in operation (as of June 2007) | orbiter | success | atmospheric studies | [81] | ||
MESSENGER | NASA | October 24, 2006 | flyby | success | gravity assist only; minimum distance 2990 km | [82] | ||
June 6, 2007 | success | minimum distance 300 km; en route to Mercury | ||||||
PLANET-C | JAXA | 2010 | orbiter | planned | [83] | |||
Venera-D | RFSA | 2013 | orbiter | planned | [84] | |||
Venus In-Situ Explorer | NASA | 2013 | in-situ explorer | planned | [85] | |||
Venus Surface Explorer | NASA | 2020 | in-situ explorer | planned | [86] |
Earth flybys
These are probes that incidentally performed Earth flybys during missions to other bodies, often as part of gravity-assist orbital maneuvers. Earth-orbiting craft are not listed.
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Giotto (first pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | July 2, 1990 | flyby | success | first Earth flyby, en route to Comet Grigg-Skjellerup | File:Giotto illustration (large).jpg | [87] | |
Galileo (first pass) |
NASA | October 8, 1990 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Jupiter; minimum distance 960 km | File:Galileo preparations.jpg | [88] | |
Sakigake (first pass) |
ISAS | January 8, 1992 | flyby | previously visited Halley's comet | [89] | |||
Suisei | ISAS | August 20, 1992 | flyby | failure | previously visited Halley's comet; hydrazine depleted, further planned comet flybys abandoned | [90] | ||
Galileo (second pass) |
NASA | December 8, 1992 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Jupiter; minimum distance 305 km | File:Galileo preparations.jpg | [91] | |
Sakigake (second and third passes) |
ISAS | June 14, 1993 | flyby | [92] | ||||
October 28, 1994 | flyby | out of fuel; contact lost November 1995 | ||||||
NEAR Shoemaker | NASA | January 23, 1998 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Eros; closest approach 540 km | [93] | ||
Nozomi (first pass) |
ISAS | December 20, 1998 | flyby | partial success | gravity assist on planned mission to Mars; valve malfunction during flyby required extra burn, which later forced alternate trajectory plan | [94] | ||
Giotto (second pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | July 1, 1999 | flyby | n/a | already defunct | File:Giotto illustration (large).jpg | [95] | |
Cassini | NASA/ File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ ASI |
August 1999 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Saturn | [96] | ||
Stardust (first pass) |
NASA | January 15, 2001 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to comet 81P/Wild | [97] | ||
Nozomi (second pass) |
ISAS | December, 2002 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Mars | [98] | ||
Nozomi (third pass) |
ISAS | June 19, 2003 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Mars | [99] | ||
Hayabusa | ISAS | May 19, 2004 | flyby | success | en route to Itokawa | [100] | ||
Rosetta (first pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 4 March 2005 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to asteroid and comet encounters | [101] | ||
MESSENGER | NASA | August 2, 2005 | flyby | success | en route to Venus and Mercury | [102] | ||
Stardust (second pass) |
NASA | January 15, 2006 | flyby | success | drop-off of sample return capsule | [103] | ||
Rosetta (second and third passes) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 13 November 2007 | flyby | success | gravity assists en route to asteroid and comet encounters | |||
13 November 2009 | flyby | yet to arrive | ||||||
Stardust (third pass) |
NASA | January 14, 2009 | flyby | yet to arrive | [104] |
Lunar probes
The list does not include the manned Apollo missions.
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pioneer 0 | DOD | August 17, 1958 | orbiter | failure | first attempted launch beyond Earth orbit; launch vehicle failure; maximum altitude 16 km | [105] | ||
Luna 1958A† | USSR | September 23, 1958 | impactor | failure | launch vehicle failure | [106] | ||
Pioneer 1 | NASA/ DOD |
October 11, 1958 | orbiter | failure | second stage premature shutdown; maximum altitude 113,800 km; some data returned | File:Thor-Able I with the Pioneer I spacecraft.jpg | [107] | |
Luna 1958B† | USSR | October 12, 1958 | impactor | failure | launch vehicle failure | [108] | ||
Pioneer 2 | NASA/ STL |
November 8, 1958 | orbiter | failure | third stage failure; maximum altitude 1,550 km; some data returned | [109] | ||
Luna 1958C† | USSR | December 4, 1958 | impactor | failure | launch vehicle failure | [110] | ||
Pioneer 3 | NASA/ DOD |
December 6, 1958 | flyby | failure | fuel depletion; maximum altitude 102,360 km; some data returned | [111] | ||
Luna 1 | USSR | January 4, 1959 | flyby | partial success | first spacecraft in the vicinity of the Moon (flew within 5,995 km, but probably an intended impactor) | [112] | ||
Luna 1959A† | USSR | June 18, 1959 | impactor | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [113] | ||
Pioneer 4 | NASA/ DOD |
March 4, 1959 | flyby | partial success | achieved distant flyby; first US probe to enter solar orbit | [114] | ||
Luna 2 | USSR | September 14, 1959 | impactor | success | first impact on Moon | [115] | ||
Pioneer P-1 | NASA | September 24, 1959? | orbiter? | failure | designation sometimes given to a failed launch or launchpad explosion during testing; conflicting information between sources | |||
Luna 3 | USSR | October 6, 1959 | flyby | success | first images from the lunar farside | File:Luna 3 flyby probe.jpg | [116] | |
Pioneer P-3 | NASA | November 26, 1959 | orbiter | failure | disintegrated shortly after launch | [117] | ||
Luna 1960A† | USSR | April 15, 1960 | flyby | failure | failed to attain correct trajectory | [118] | ||
Luna 1960B† | USSR | April 16, 1960 | flyby | failure | launch vehicle failure | [119] | ||
Pioneer P-30 | NASA | September 25, 1960 | orbiter | failure | second stage failure; failed to reach Earth orbit | [120] | ||
Pioneer P-31 | NASA | December 15, 1960 | orbiter | failure | first stage failure | [121] | ||
Ranger 3 | NASA | January 28, 1962 | impactor | failure | missed target | [122] | ||
Ranger 4 | NASA | April 26, 1962 | impactor | failure | hit the lunar farside; no data returned | [123] | ||
Ranger 5 | NASA | October 21, 1962 | impactor | failure | power failure, missed target | [124] | ||
Sputnik 25 | USSR | January 5, 1963 | lander | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [125] | ||
Luna 1963B† | USSR | February 2, 1963 | lander? | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [126] | ||
Luna 4 | USSR | April 5, 1963 | lander? | failure | missed target, became Earth satellite | File:USSR Luna lander bus.jpg | [127] | |
Ranger 6 | NASA | 2 February, 1964 | impactor | partial success | impacted, but no pictures returned due to power failure | [128] | ||
Luna 1964A† | USSR | March 21, 1964 | lander | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [129] | ||
Luna 1964B† | USSR | April 20, 1964 | lander | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [130] | ||
Zond 1964A† | USSR | June 4, 1964 | flyby | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [131] | ||
Ranger 7 | NASA | July 31, 1964 | impactor | success | returned pictures up until impact | [132] | ||
Ranger 8 | NASA | February 20, 1965 | impactor | success | returned pictures up until impact | [133] | ||
Cosmos 60 | USSR | March 12, 1965 | lander | failure | failed to leave Earth orbit | [134] | ||
Ranger 9 | NASA | March 24, 1965 | impactor | success | TV broadcast of live pictures up until impact | [135] | ||
Luna 1965A† | USSR | April 10, 1965 | lander? | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit? | [136] | ||
Luna 5 | USSR | May 12, 1965 | lander | failure | crashed into Moon | [137] | ||
Luna 6 | USSR | June 8, 1965 | lander | failure | missed Moon | [138] | ||
Zond 3 | USSR | July 20, 1965 | flyby | success | File:Zond 3.jpg | [139] | ||
Luna 7 | USSR | October 7, 1965 | lander | failure | crashed into Moon | [140] | ||
Luna 8 | USSR | December 6, 1965 | lander | failure | crashed into Moon | [141] | ||
Luna 9 | USSR | February 3, 1966 – February 6, 1966 |
lander | success | first soft landing; first images from the surface | File:Luna 9 landing capsule.jpg | [142] | |
Cosmos 111 | USSR | March 1, 1966 | orbiter | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [143] | ||
Luna 10 | USSR | April 3, 1966 – May 30, 1966 |
orbiter | success | File:Luna orbiter bus.jpg | [144] | ||
Luna 1966A† | USSR | April 30, 1966 | orbiter? | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [145] | ||
Surveyor 1 | NASA | June 2, 1966 | lander | success | first US soft landing; Surveyor program performed various tests in support of forthcoming manned landings | [146] | ||
Explorer 33 | NASA | July 1, 1966 – September 15, 1971 |
orbiter | partial success | studied interplanetary plasma, cosmic rays, magnetic fields and solar X rays; failed to attain lunar orbit as intended, but achieved mission objectives from Earth orbit | [147] | ||
Lunar Orbiter 1 | NASA | August 14, 1966 – October 29, 1966 |
orbiter | success | photographic mapping of lunar surface; intentionally impacted after completion of mission | [148] | ||
Luna 11 | USSR | August 28, 1966 – October 1, 1966 |
orbiter | success | File:Luna orbiter photo bus.jpg | [149] | ||
Surveyor 2 | NASA | September 23, 1966 | lander | failure | crashed | [150] | ||
Luna 12 | USSR | October 25, 1966 – January 19, 1967 |
orbiter | success | File:Luna orbiter photo bus.jpg | [151] | ||
Lunar Orbiter 2 | NASA | November 10, 1966 – October 11, 1967 |
orbiter | success | photographic mapping of lunar surface; intentionally impacted after completion of mission | [152] | ||
Luna 13 | USSR | December 24, 1966 | lander | success | File:Luna 13.jpg | [153] | ||
Lunar Orbiter 3 | NASA | February 8, 1967 – October 9, 1967 |
orbiter | success | photographic mapping of lunar surface; intentionally impacted after completion of mission | [154] | ||
Surveyor 3 | NASA | April 20, 1967 – May 4, 1967 |
lander | success | [155] | |||
Lunar Orbiter 4 | NASA | May–October 1967 | orbiter | success | lunar photographic survey | [156] | ||
Explorer 35 | NASA | July 1967 – June 24, 1973 |
orbiter | success | studies of interplanetary plasma, magnetic fields, energetic particles and solar X rays | [157] | ||
Surveyor 4 | NASA | July 17, 1967 | lander | failure | crashed into Moon | [158] | ||
Lunar Orbiter 5 | NASA | August 5, 1967 – January 31, 1968 |
orbiter | success | lunar photographic survey; intentionally impacted after completion of mission | [159] | ||
Surveyor 5 | NASA | September 11, 1967 – December 17, 1967 |
lander | success | [160] | |||
Zond 1967A† | USSR | September 28, 1967 | failure | lunar capsule test flight; launch failure | [161] | |||
Surveyor 6 | NASA | November 10, 1967 – December 14, 1967 |
lander | success | [162] | |||
Zond 1967B† | USSR | November 22, 1967 | failure | lunar capsule test flight; launch failure | [163] | |||
Surveyor 7 | NASA | January 10, 1968 – February 21, 1968 |
lander | success | [164] | |||
Luna 1968A† | USSR | February 7, 1968 | orbiter? | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [165] | ||
Zond 4 | USSR | March 2, 1968 (launch) | lunar programme flight test, directed away from Moon, either intentionally or unintentionally | [166] | ||||
Luna 14 | USSR | April 10, 1968 – ? | orbiter | success | File:Luna orbiter photo bus.jpg | [167] | ||
Zond 1968A† | USSR | April 23, 1968 | flyby? | failure | launch failure | [168] | ||
Zond 5 | USSR | September 18, 1968 | flyby | success | bioscience experiments | [169] | ||
Zond 6 | USSR | November 14, 1968 | flyby | success | cosmic-ray, micrometeoroid and bioscience studies | [170] | ||
Zond 1969A† | USSR | January 20, 1969 | flyby | failure | launch aborted | [171] | ||
Luna 1969A† | USSR | February 19, 1969 | rover | failure | launch vehicle failure | [172] | ||
Zond L1S-1† | USSR | February 21, 1969 | orbiter | failure | launch vehicle failure | [173] | ||
Luna 1969B† | USSR | April 15, 1969 | sample return? | failure | launch failure | [174] | ||
Luna 1969C† | USSR | June 14, 1969 | sample return | failure | launch failure | [175] | ||
Zond L1S-2† | USSR | July 3, 1969 | orbiter | failure | launch failure | [176] | ||
Luna 15 | USSR | July 21, 1969 | sample return | failure | crashed into Moon | [177] | ||
Zond 7 | USSR | August 11, 1969 | flyby | success | returned to soft landing on Earth | [178] | ||
Cosmos 300 | USSR | September 23, 1969 | sample return | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [179] | ||
Cosmos 305 | USSR | October 22, 1969 | sample return | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [180] | ||
Luna 1970A† | USSR | February 6, 1970 | sample return? | failure | launch vehicle failure | [181] | ||
Luna 1970B† | USSR | February 19, 1970 | orbiter? | failure | launch vehicle failure | [182] | ||
Luna 16 | USSR | September 20, 1970 | sample return | success | first robotic sample return | File:Luna-16.jpg | [183] | |
Zond 8 | USSR | October 24, 1970 | flyby | success | returned to soft landing on Earth | [184] | ||
Luna 17 | USSR | November 17, 1970 – October 4, 1971 |
lander | success | File:Lunakod landing bus.jpg | [185] | ||
Lunokhod 1 | rover | success | first robotic rover; travelled over 10 km | File:Lunokhod 1.jpg | ||||
Luna 18 | USSR | September 11, 1971 | lander/sample return? | failure | crashed into Moon | [186] | ||
Luna 19 | USSR | October 3, 1971 – October 1972 |
orbiter | success | File:Luna-22.jpg | [187] | ||
Luna 20 | USSR | February 21, 1972 | sample return | success | second successful robotic sample return | File:Luna-16.jpg | [188] | |
Soyuz L3† | USSR | November 23, 1972 | orbiter | failure | launch failure | [189] | ||
Luna 21 | USSR | January 15, 1973 – May 1973? |
lander | success | File:Lunakod landing bus.jpg | [190] | ||
Lunokhod 2 | rover | success | second robotic rover; travelled 37 km | File:Lunokhod2.jpg | ||||
Explorer 49 | NASA | June 15, 1973 – June 1975 |
orbiter | success | radio astronomy observations; last US lunar mission until 1994 | [191] | ||
Mariner 10 | NASA | November 1973 | flyby | success | en route to Venus and Mercury | [192] | ||
Luna 22 | USSR | June 2, 1974 – November 1974 |
orbiter | success | File:Luna-22.jpg | [193] | ||
Luna 23 | USSR | November 6, 1974 | sample return | failure | damaged on landing, sample return failed | [194] | ||
Luna 1975A† | USSR | October 16, 1975 | sample return | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [195] | ||
Luna 24 | USSR | August 18, 1976 | sample return | success | third and final successful sample return in Luna programme | File:Luna24.jpg | [196] | |
ICE (formerly ISEE3) | NASA | December 22, 1983 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to comet flybys | [197] | ||
Hiten | ISAS | February–April 1993 | orbiter | success | in Moon-crossing Earth orbit from January 1990, later transferred to lunar orbit after failure of Hagoromo; intentionally impacted on Moon at end of mission | [198] | ||
Hagoromo | ISAS | March 1990 | orbiter | failure | released by Hiten into lunar orbit, but transmitter failed and orbit never confirmed | |||
Clementine | BMDO/ NASA |
February–June 1994 | orbiter | partial success | lunar and Earth observations and component testing; planned Geographos flyby failed | [199] | ||
AsiaSat 3 | AsiaSat | May/June 1998 | errant communications satellite, flew within 6,200 kilometers of Moon during orbit correction manoeuvres | [200] | ||||
Lunar Prospector | NASA | January 1998 – July 1999 |
orbiter | success | lunar surface mapping; intentionally impacted into polar crater at end of mission to test for liberation of water vapour (not detected) | [201] | ||
Nozomi | ISAS | September 24, 1998 | flyby | success | gravity assists on planned mission to Mars | [202] | ||
December 18, 1998 | flyby | success | ||||||
SMART-1 | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | November 13, 2004 – September 3, 2006 |
orbiter | success | technology testbed and lunar geological studies; intentionally impacted at end of mission | [203] | ||
SELENE (Kaguya) |
JAXA | October 3, 2007 – planned one year mission | orbiter, two co-satellites | in orbit | planned mineralogical, geographical, magnetic and gravitational observations | File:SELENE.jpg | [204] | |
Chang'e 1 | CNSA | November 5 2007 | orbiter | in orbit | [205] | |||
Chandrayaan I | ISRO | 2008 | orbiter | planned | File:Chandrayaan1 as updated.jpg | [206] | ||
impactor | ||||||||
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter | NASA | 2008 | orbiter | planned | [207] | |||
LCROSS | NASA | 2008 | impactor | planned | [208] |
Mars probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mars 1960A | USSR | October 10, 1960 | flyby | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [209] | ||
Mars 1960B | USSR | October 14, 1960 | flyby | failure | failed to reach Earth orbit | [210] | ||
Mars 1962A | USSR | October 24, 1962 | flyby | failure | exploded in or en route to Earth orbit | [211] | ||
Mars 1962B | USSR | November 11, 1962 (launch) | lander | failure | broke up during transfer to Mars trajectory | [212] | ||
Mars 1 | USSR | June 19, 1963 | flyby | failure | contact lost en route; flew within approximately 193,000 km of Mars | File:Mars-1.jpg | [213] | |
Mariner 3 | NASA | November 5, 1964 | flyby | failure | protective shield failed to eject, preventing craft from attaining correct trajectory | [214] | ||
Zond 2 | USSR | August 6, 1965 | flyby | failure | contact lost en route; flew within 1,500 km of Mars | File:Zond 3.jpg | [215] | |
Mariner 4 | NASA | July 15, 1965 | flyby | success | first close-up images of Mars | [216] | ||
Mariner 6 | NASA | July 31, 1969 | flyby | success | File:Mariner 67.gif | [217] | ||
Mariner 7 | NASA | August 5, 1969 | flyby | success | File:Mariner 67.gif | [218] | ||
Mars 1969A | USSR | March 27, 1969 | orbiter | failure | launch failure | File:Mars 1969.jpg | [219] | |
Mars 1969B | USSR | April 2, 1969 | orbiter | failure | launch failure | File:Mars 1969.jpg | [220] | |
Mariner 8 | NASA | May 9, 1971 | orbiter | failure | launch vehicle failure | [221] | ||
Mariner 9 | NASA | November 14, 1971 | orbiter | success | first spacecraft to orbit another planet | [222] | ||
Mars 2 | USSR | November 1971 – August 1972 |
orbiter | success | File:Mars 3.gif | [223] | ||
Mars 2 Lander | USSR | November 27, 1971 | lander and short range rover | failure | crashed; first manmade object to reach surface of Mars | [224] | ||
Mars 3 | USSR | December 1971 – August 1972 |
orbiter | partial success | attained a different orbit than intended due to insufficient fuel | File:Mars 3.gif | [225] | |
Mars 3 Lander | USSR | December 2, 1971 | lander and short range rover | failure | contact lost immediately after soft landing | [226] | ||
Cosmos 419 | USSR | May 10, 1971 | orbiter | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | [227] | ||
Mars 4 | USSR | February 10, 1974 | orbiter | failure | orbit insertion failed, became flyby | File:Mars 4.jpg | [228] | |
Mars 5 | USSR | February 1974 | orbiter | success | [229] | |||
Mars 6 | USSR | March 12, 1974 | flyby | success | [230] | |||
Mars 6 Lander | USSR | March 12, 1974 | lander | failure | crash-landed, contact lost | |||
Mars 7 | USSR | March 9, 1974 | flyby | success | [231] | |||
Mars 7 Lander | USSR | March 9, 1974 | lander | failure | missed Mars | |||
Viking 1 Orbiter | NASA | June 1976 – August 1980 |
orbiter | success | [232] | |||
Viking 1 Lander | NASA | July 20, 1976 – November 13, 1982 |
lander | success | first images from surface | [233] | ||
Viking 2 Orbiter | NASA | August 1976 – July 1978 |
orbiter | success | [234] | |||
Viking 2 Lander | NASA | September 3, 1976 – April 11, 1980 |
lander | success | [235] | |||
Phobos 1 | USSR | July 7, 1988 (launch) | orbiter | failure | contact lost en route to Mars | File:Fobos.jpg | [236] | |
Phobos 2 | USSR | January 29, 1989 – March 27, 1989 |
orbiter | partial success | Mars orbit acquired, but contact lost shortly before Phobos approach phase and deployment of Phobos landers | File:Fobos.jpg | [237] | |
Mars Observer | NASA | September 25, 1992 (launch) | orbiter | failure | contact lost shortly before Mars orbit insertion | File:Marsobs 1.gif | [238] | |
Mars 96 | RKA | November 16, 1996 (launch) | orbiter | failure | failed to escape Earth orbit | File:Mars 96 Orbiter.jpg | [239] | |
lander | [240] | |||||||
lander | [241] | |||||||
penetrator | [242] | |||||||
penetrator | [243] | |||||||
Mars Pathfinder | NASA | July 4, 1997 – September 27, 1997 |
lander | success | [244] | |||
Sojourner | NASA | July 6, 1997 – September 27, 1997 |
rover | success | [245] | |||
Mars Global Surveyor | NASA | September 12, 1997 – November 2, 2006 |
orbiter | success | [246] | |||
Mars Climate Orbiter | NASA | September 23, 1999 | orbiter | failure | Mars orbit insertion failed due to navigation error | [247] | ||
Mars Polar Lander | NASA | December 3, 1999 | lander | failure | contact lost just prior to entering Martian atmosphere | [248] | ||
Deep Space 2 "Amundsen" | NASA | December 3, 1999 | penetrator | [249] | ||||
Deep Space 2 "Scott" | NASA | December 3, 1999 | penetrator | |||||
2001 Mars Odyssey | NASA | October 24, 2001 – still active (as of June 2007) |
orbiter | success | [250] | |||
Nozomi | ISAS | December 14, 2003 | orbiter | failure | failed to attain Mars orbit, became flyby | File:Nozomi.gif | [251] | |
Mars Express | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | December 25, 2003 – still active (as of June 2007) | orbiter | success | [252] | |||
Beagle 2 | UK | December 25, 2003 | lander | failure | no contact after landing | File:Beagle2ontheground.jpg | [253] | |
MER-A "Spirit" | NASA | January 4, 2004 – still active (as of August 2007) |
rover | success | [254] | |||
MER-B "Opportunity" | NASA | January 25, 2004 – still active (as of August 2007) |
rover | success | [255] | |||
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter | NASA | March 10, 2006 – still active (as of June 2007) |
orbiter | success | [256] | |||
Rosetta | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | February 25, 2007 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to asteroid and comet encounters | [257] | ||
Phoenix | NASA | May 2008 | lander | launched | will collect soil samples near the northern pole to investigate the history of water on Mars and the possibility of life there | File:Lander small.jpg | [258] | |
Dawn | NASA | March 2009 | flyby | launched | gravity assist en route to Vesta and Ceres | [259] | ||
Mars Science Laboratory | NASA | 2010 | rover | under construction | [260] | |||
ExoMars | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 2013 | rover | planned | [261] |
Phobos probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phobos 1 | USSR | July 7, 1988 (launch) | lander | failure | contact lost en route to Mars | File:Fobos.jpg | [262] | |
Phobos 2 | USSR | March 27, 1989 (contact lost) | lander | failure | attained Mars orbit; contact lost prior to deployment of lander | File:Fobos.jpg | [263] | |
Phobos-Grunt | RKA | 2009 | sample return | planned |
Jupiter probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pioneer 10 | NASA | December 3, 1973 | flyby | success | first probe to cross the asteroid belt. | [264] | ||
Pioneer 11 | NASA | December 4, 1974 | flyby | success | went on to visit Saturn | [265] | ||
Voyager 1 | NASA | March 5, 1979 | flyby | success | went on to visit Saturn | [266] | ||
Voyager 2 | NASA | July 9, 1979 | flyby | success | went on to visit Saturn, Uranus and Neptune | [267] | ||
Ulysses (first pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
February 1992 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to inclined heliocentric orbit for solar polar observations | [268] | ||
Galileo Orbiter | NASA/ DLR |
December 7, 1995 – September 21, 2003 |
orbiter | success | also flew by various of Jupiter's moons; intentionally flown into Jupiter at end of mission | File:Galileo preparations.jpg | [269] | |
Galileo Probe | NASA/ DLR |
December 7, 1995 | atmospheric probe | success | [270] | |||
Cassini | NASA/ File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ ASI |
December 2000 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Saturn | [271] | ||
Ulysses (second pass) |
File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
2003–04 | distant flyby | success | [272] | |||
New Horizons | NASA | February 28, 2007 | flyby | success | gravity assist en route to Pluto | File:New horizons Pluto.jpg | [273] | |
Juno | NASA | 2016 | orbiter | in development | [274] |
Saturn probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pioneer 11 | NASA | September 1, 1979 | flyby | success | previously visited Jupiter | [275] | ||
Voyager 1 | NASA | November 12, 1980 | flyby | success | previously visited Jupiter | [276] | ||
Voyager 2 | NASA | August 5, 1981 | flyby | success | previously visited Jupiter, went on to visit Uranus and Neptune | [277] | ||
Cassini | NASA/ File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ ASI |
July 1, 2004 – still active (as of August 2007) |
orbiter | success | also performed flybys of a number of Saturn's moons, and deployed the Huygens Titan lander | [278] |
Titan probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Huygens | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | January 14, 2005 | atmospheric probe, lander | success | deployed by Cassini; first probe to land on a satellite of another planet | File:Huygensprobe.jpg | [279] |
Uranus probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Voyager 2 | NASA | January 24, 1986 | flyby | success | previously visited Jupiter and Saturn; went on to visit Neptune | [280] |
Neptune probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Voyager 2 | NASA | August 25, 1989 | flyby | success | previously visited Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus | [281] | ||
Neptune Orbiter | NASA | 2030 | orbiter | under study | [282] |
Dwarf planet probes
Ceres probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dawn | NASA | 2015 | orbiter | yet to arrive | will orbit Vesta first | [283] |
Pluto probes
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Horizons | NASA | 2015 | flyby | yet to arrive | flybys of other Kuiper Belt objects may follow (targets yet to be decided) | File:New horizons Pluto.jpg | [284] |
Asteroid probes
Target | Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
951 Gaspra | Galileo | NASA | October 29, 1991 | flyby | success | en route to Jupiter; minimum distance 1900 km | File:Galileo preparations.jpg | [285] | |
243 Ida | Galileo | NASA | August 28, 1993 | flyby | success | en route to Jupiter; minimum distance 2400 km; discovery of the first asteroid satellite Dactyl | File:Galileo preparations.jpg | [286] | |
1620 Geographos | Clementine | BMDO/ NASA |
1994 | flyby | failure | flyby cancelled due to equipment malfunction | [287] | ||
253 Mathilde | NEAR Shoemaker |
NASA | June 27, 1997 | flyby | success | flew within 1200 km of 253 Mathilde en route to 433 Eros | [288] | ||
433 Eros | NEAR Shoemaker |
NASA | January 1999 | orbiter | failure | became flyby due to software and communications problems (later attempt at orbit insertion succeeded; see below) | [289] | ||
9969 Braille | Deep Space 1 | NASA | July 29, 1999 | flyby | partial success | no close-up images due to camera pointing error; went on to visit comet 19P/Borrelly | [290] | ||
2685 Masursky | Cassini | NASA/ File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ ASI |
January 23, 2000 | distant flyby | success | en route to Saturn | [291] | ||
433 Eros | NEAR Shoemaker |
NASA | February 2000 – February 2001 |
orbiter, became lander | success | improvised landing by orbiter at end of mission | [292] | ||
5535 Annefrank | Stardust | NASA | November 2, 2002 | distant flyby | success | went on to visit comet 81P/Wild | [293] | ||
25143 Itokawa | Hayabusa | ISAS | 2005–07 | sample return | arrived | return journey to Earth began in April 2007, scheduled to arrive in 2010; status of sample unclear | [294] | ||
MINERVA | ISAS | November 12, 2005 | hopper | failure | missed target | ||||
132524 APL | New Horizons | NASA | June 2006 | distant flyby | success | en route to Pluto | File:New horizons Pluto.jpg | [295] | |
2867 Šteins | Rosetta | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | September 2008 | flyby | yet to arrive | [296] | |||
21 Lutetia | Rosetta | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | July 2010 | flyby | yet to arrive | en route to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko | [297] | ||
4 Vesta | Dawn | NASA | September 2011 | orbiter | launched | scheduled to continue to Ceres | [298] |
Comet probes
Target | Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Type | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21P/Giacobini-Zinner | ICE (formerly ISEE3) | NASA | September 11, 1985 | flyby | success | previously solar monitor ISEE3; went on to observe Halley's Comet | [299] | ||
1P/Halley | Vega 1 | SAS | March 6 1986 | flyby | success | minimum distance 8,890 km; previously visited Venus | File:Vega 1-2.jpg | [300] | |
1P/Halley | Suisei | ISAS | March 8 1986 | flyby | success | 151,000 km | [301] | ||
1P/Halley | Vega 2 | SAS | March 9 1986 | flyby | success | minimum distance 8,890 km; previously visited Venus | File:Vega 1-2.jpg | [302] | |
1P/Halley | Sakigake | ISAS | March 1986 | distant flyby | partial success | minimum distance 6.99 million km | [303] | ||
1P/Halley | Giotto | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | March 14, 1986 | flyby | success | minimum distance 596 km; went on to visit comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup | File:Giotto illustration (large).jpg | [304] | |
1P/Halley | ICE (formerly ISEE3) | NASA | March 28 1986 | distant obser- vations |
success | minimum distance 32 million km; previously visited comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner | [305] | ||
26P/Grigg-Skjellerup | Giotto | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | July 10, 1992 | flyby | success | previously visited Halley's Comet | File:Giotto illustration (large).jpg | [306] | |
45P/ Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova |
Sakigake | ISAS | 1996 | flyby | failure | contact lost; previously visited Halley's Comet | [307] | ||
21P/Giacobini-Zinner | Sakigake | ISAS | 1998 | flyby | failure | ||||
55P/Tempel-Tuttle | Suisei | ISAS | 1998 | flyby | failure | abandoned due to lack of fuel; previously visited Halley's Comet | [308] | ||
21P/Giacobini-Zinner | Suisei | ISAS | 1998 | flyby | failure | ||||
19P/Borrelly | Deep Space 1 | NASA | September 22, 2001 | flyby | success | previously visited asteroid 9969 Braille | [309] | ||
2P/Encke | CONTOUR | NASA | 2003 | flyby | failure | contact lost shortly after launch | [310] | ||
81P/Wild | Stardust | NASA | January 2, 2004 | flyby, sample return | success | sample returned January 2006; also visited asteroid 5535 Annefrank | [311] | ||
9P/Tempel | Deep Impact | NASA | July 2005 | flyby | success | [312] | |||
Impactor | NASA | July 4, 2005 | impactor | success | |||||
73P/ Schwassmann-Wachmann |
CONTOUR | NASA | 2006 | flyby | failure | contact lost shortly after launch | [313] | ||
6P/d'Arrest | CONTOUR | NASA | 2008 | flyby | failure | contact lost shortly after launch | [314] | ||
85P/Boethin | Deep Impact | NASA | December 5 2008 | flyby | yet to arrive | mission extension | [315] | ||
9P/Tempel | Stardust | NASA | February 14 2011 | flyby | yet to arrive | mission extension | [316] | ||
67P/Churyumov- Gerasimenko |
Rosetta | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 2014–15 | orbiter | yet to arrive | flybys of asteroids 2867 Šteins and 21 Lutetia also scheduled | [317] | ||
Philae | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 2014 | lander | yet to arrive | [318] |
Probes leaving the Solar System
Spacecraft | Organization | Notes | Image | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pioneer 10 | NASA | Left Jupiter in December 1973. Mission ended March 1997. Last contact January 23, 2003. Craft now presumed dead; no further contact attempts planned. | [319] | |
Pioneer 11 | NASA | Left Saturn in September 1979. Last contact September 1995. The craft's antenna cannot be manoeuvred to point to Earth, and it is not known if it is still transmitting. No further contact attempts are planned. | [320] | |
Voyager 1 | NASA | Left Saturn in November 1980. Still in regular contact and transmitting scientific data (as of July 2007). Contact hoped to be maintained until at least 2020. | [321] | |
Voyager 2 | NASA | Left Neptune in August 1989. Still in regular contact and transmitting scientific data (as of July 2007). Contact hoped to be maintained until at least 2020. | [322] | |
New Horizons | NASA | Currently en route to outer Solar System. Expected to reach Pluto in July 2015. | File:New horizons Pluto.jpg | [323] |
Other probes to leave Earth orbit
For completeness, this section lists probes that have left (or will leave) Earth orbit, but are not targeted at any of the above bodies.
Spacecraft | Organization | Date | Location | Status | Notes | Image | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WMAP | NASA | June 30, 2001 (launch) – still active (as of June 2007) | Sun-Earth L2 point | success | cosmic background radiation observations | [324] | ||
Spitzer Space Telescope | NASA | August 25, 2003 (launch) – still active (as of June 2007) | Earth-trailing heliocentric orbit | success | infrared astronomy | File:Spitzer- Telescopio.jpg | [325] | |
Herschel Space Observatory | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA/ NASA |
July 2008 (launch) | Sun-Earth L2 point | planned | study of formation and evolution of galaxies and stars | [326] | ||
Planck Surveyor | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | July 2008 (launch) | Sun-Earth L2 point | planned | cosmic microwave background observations | File:Planck satellite.jpg | [327] | |
Kepler | NASA | February 2009 (launch) | Earth-trailing heliocentric orbit | planned | search for extrasolar planets | [328] | ||
LISA Pathfinder | File:ESA LOGO.svg ESA | 2009 (launch) | Sun-Earth L1 point | planned | test mission for proposed LISA gravitational wave observatory | [329] |