As the 40th anniversary of the moon landing approaches, we look at key events in the history of
space exploration...!
space exploration...!

Instead, the Soviets claim she lived for several days

for 12 years, though it stops transmitting data in May 1958. In this photo, Dr Eberhard Rees, Major General John B Medaris, German-born rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, Dr Ernst Stuhlinger, Willi Mrazek and Dr Walter Haeussermann display a full-scale model of Explorer I


15 minutes and 28 seconds. Twenty days after this achievement, President John F Kennedy pledges that America will send a man to moon before the end of the decade

tragedy leads to a complete redesign of NASA's command modules, and it is nearly 21 months beforethe launch and completion of the next manned mission, Apollo 7

space, has its first test flight



launched on a planned trip to the moon. Two days into the mission, a fault in the electrical system produces an explosion in an oxygen tank, leading to a loss of electrical power and failure of both oxygen tanks...

safely

passes in December 1973. By most definitions it is also the first craft to leave the solar system.
It sends its last communication back to Earth on January 22 2003, while 7.6 billion miles from
Earth

February 1974, and remains in Earth's orbit until July 1979, when it crashes into Western
Australia. However, the Soviet Union launched the first space station, the Salyut I, on 19 April
1971

gesture, the two mission commanders, Tom Stafford and Alexey Leonov, exchange the first
international handshake in space. After 44 hours together, the two ships separate. This was the
final flight of an Apollo spacecraft and the last manned space mission until...

Russian woman in space, Valentina Tereshkova

seconds after take-off...

discover that the telescope's mirror has been ground incorrectly. The flaw is corrected on a shuttle mission in December 1993, with a further servicing mission in May 2009

rover, named Sojourner, goes on to explore the surface of the planet for 80 days


Bill Shepherd and cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev. They spend four months on board.The space station has been constantly staffed ever since, providing a permanent human presence in space


1 February 2003: Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrates upon re-entering the Earth's atmosphere after 16 days in space. All seven crew-members are killed

Under a cloud-washed sky, spectators watch as space shuttle Endeavour rises majestically from
Launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on the STS-127 mission to the
International Space Station. Liftoff was at 6:03 p.m. EDT on July 15, 2009, and was the sixth
launch attempt for the mission. The launch was scrubbed on June 13 and June 17 when a hydrogen gas leak occurred during tanking due to a misaligned ground umbilical carrier plate. The mission was postponed July 11, 12 and 13 due to weather conditions near the Shuttle Landing Facility at Kennedy that violated rules for launching, and lightning issues.
Launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on the STS-127 mission to the
International Space Station. Liftoff was at 6:03 p.m. EDT on July 15, 2009, and was the sixth
launch attempt for the mission. The launch was scrubbed on June 13 and June 17 when a hydrogen gas leak occurred during tanking due to a misaligned ground umbilical carrier plate. The mission was postponed July 11, 12 and 13 due to weather conditions near the Shuttle Landing Facility at Kennedy that violated rules for launching, and lightning issues.
Endeavour will deliver the Japanese Experiment Module's Exposed Facility and the Experiment
Logistics Module-Exposed Section in the final of three flights dedicated to the assembly of the
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo laboratory complex on the station.
Logistics Module-Exposed Section in the final of three flights dedicated to the assembly of the
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo laboratory complex on the station.
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