Programs in this section are sorted by the years when the first successful crewed spaceflight took place.
Vostok program (USSR, 1956–1964) The
Vostok program was a project that succeeded in putting a person into orbit for the first time. Sergei Korolev and Konstantin Feoktistov began, in June 1956, crewed spacecraft research. The program developed the
Vostok spacecraft from the
Zenit spy satellite project and adapted the
Vostok rocket from an existing
ICBM design. Just before the first release of the name Vostok to the press, it was a classified word. By August/September 1958 a division had been formed devoted to producing the first Vostok craft. The official approval (decree) for the Vostok was delayed until 22 May 1959 by competition with photo reconnaissance programs. Vostok 1 was the first
human spaceflight. The
Vostok 3KA spacecraft was launched on April 12, 1961, taking into space
Yuri Gagarin, a
cosmonaut from the
Soviet Union. The Vostok 1 mission was the first time anyone had journeyed into
outer space and the first time anyone had entered into
orbit. There were six Vostok flights in total, including the June, 1963
Vostok 6 mission flown by
Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space. Another seven Vostok flights (Vostok 7 to 13) were originally planned, going through to April 1966, but these were canceled and the components recycled into the
Voskhod program, which was intended to achieve more Soviet
firsts in space.
Project Mercury (USA, 1959–1963) Project Mercury was the first human spaceflight program of the United States. It ran from 1959 through 1963 with the goal of putting a human in orbit around the Earth.
John Glenn's
Mercury-Atlas 6 flight on 20 February 1962 was the first Mercury flight to achieve this goal. Prior to that, the
Mercury-Redstone 3 mission brought the first American into space,
Alan Shepard. It featured the first manual pilot control of the spacecraft and the landing with pilot still within it. Early planning and research was carried out by the
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, and the program was officially conducted by the newly created
NASA. Because of their small size it was said that the Mercury spacecraft capsules were worn, not ridden. With of habitable volume, the capsule was just large enough for the single crew member. Inside were 120 controls: 55 electrical switches, 30 fuses and 35 mechanical levers. The spacecraft was designed by
Max Faget and NASA's Space Task Group. NASA ordered 20 production spacecraft, numbered 1 through 20, from
McDonnell Aircraft Company,
St. Louis, Missouri. Five of the twenty spacecraft, #10, 12, 15, 17, and 19, were not flown. Spacecraft #3 and #4 were destroyed during uncrewed test flights.
Spacecraft #11 sank and was recovered from the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean after 38 years. Some spacecraft were modified after initial production (refurbished after launch abort, modified for longer missions, etc.) and received a letter designation after their number, examples 2A, 15B. Some spacecraft were modified twice; for example, spacecraft 15 became 15A and then 15B.
North American X-15 (USA, 1954–1968) The
North American X-15 rocket-powered aircraft was part of the
X-series of
experimental aircraft, initiated with the
Bell X-1, that were made for the
USAF, NASA, and the
USN. The X-15 set speed and altitude records in the early 1960s, reaching the
edge of outer space and returning with valuable data used in
aircraft and
spacecraft design. It currently holds the world record for the fastest speed ever reached by a crewed aircraft. During the X-15 program, 13 of the flights (by eight pilots) met the USAF
spaceflight criteria by exceeding the altitude of , thus qualifying the pilots for
astronaut status; some pilots also qualified for NASA
astronaut wings.
Voskhod program (USSR, 1964–1965) The
Voskhod program (,
"ascent",
"dawn") was a Soviet human spaceflight project. Voskhod development was a follow-on to the
Vostok program, recycling components left over from that program's cancellation following its first six flights. The two missions flown used the
Voskhod spacecraft and
rocket. The Voskhod spacecraft was basically a Vostok spacecraft that had a backup, solid fuel retrorocket added to the top of the descent module. The heavier weight of the craft was made possible by improvements to the
R-7 Semyorka-derived booster. The ejection seat was removed and two or three crew couches were added to the interior at a 90-degree angle to that of the Vostok crew position. However, the position of the in-flight controls was not changed, so the crew had to crane their heads 90 degrees to see the instruments. While the Vostok program was dedicated towards understanding the effects of space travel and microgravity on the human body, Voskhod's two flights were aimed towards spectacular "firsts". Cosmonaut
Alexei Leonov made the first
EVA ("spacewalk") during
Voskhod 2, which became the main success of the program, while putting the first multi-person crew into orbit during
Voskhod 1 was the objective that initially motivated it. Once both goals were realized, the program was abandoned. This followed the change in Soviet leadership, which was less concerned about stunt and prestige flights, and allowed the Soviet designers to concentrate on the
Soyuz program.
Project Gemini (USA, 1965–1966) Project Gemini was the second human spaceflight program conducted by NASA. It operated between Projects Mercury and Apollo, with 10 crewed flights occurring in 1965 and 1966. Its objective was to develop techniques for advanced space travel, notably those necessary for Project Apollo, whose objective was to land humans on the Moon. Gemini missions included the first American
extravehicular activity, and new orbital maneuvers including
rendezvous and docking. Gemini was originally seen as a simple extrapolation of the Mercury program, and thus early on was called
Mercury Mark II. The actual program had little in common with Mercury and was
superior to even Apollo in some ways. This was mainly a result of its late start date, which allowed it to benefit from much that had been learned during the early stages of the Apollo project (which, despite its later launch dates, actually began before Gemini).
Soyuz program (USSR/Russia, 1967–ongoing) The
Soyuz program (, , meaning "Union") is a human spaceflight program that was initiated by the Soviet Union in early 1967. It was originally part of a
Moon landing program intended to put a Soviet
cosmonaut on the Moon. All experimental or unsuccessful starts received the status of satellites of a series
Kosmos, and flights of the Lunar orbital ships around the Moon – the name
Zond. Both the
Soyuz spacecraft and the
Soyuz rocket are part of this program, which is now the responsibility of the
Russian Federal Space Agency. The basic
Soyuz spacecraft design was the basis for many projects, many of which never came to light. Its earliest form was intended to travel to the Moon without employing a huge booster like the
Saturn V or the Soviet
N-1 by repeatedly docking with upper stages that had been put in orbit using the same rocket as the Soyuz. This and the initial civilian designs were done under the Soviet Chief Designer
Sergei Pavlovich Korolev, who did not live to see the craft take flight. Several military derivatives actually took precedence in the Soviet design process, though they never came to pass. The launch vehicles used in the Soyuz
expendable launch system are manufactured at the
Progress State Research and Production Rocket Space Center (TsSKB-Progress) in
Samara, Russia. As well as being used in the Soyuz program as the launcher for the crewed
Soyuz spacecraft, Soyuz launch vehicles are now also used to launch robotic
Progress supply spacecraft to the
International Space Station and commercial launches marketed and operated by TsSKB-Progress and the
Starsem company. There were 11 Soyuz launches in 2001 and 9 in 2002. Currently, Soyuz vehicles are launched from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan and the
Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwest Russia. Since 2009 Soyuz launch vehicles are also being launched from the
Guiana Space Centre in
French Guiana.
Apollo Program (USA, 1961–1975) used on Apollos 15–17 The
Apollo Program was undertaken by NASA during the years 1961–1975 with the goal of conducting crewed
Moon landing missions. In 1961,
President John F. Kennedy announced a goal of landing a man on the Moon by the end of the decade. It was accomplished on July 20, 1969, by the landing of astronauts
Neil Armstrong and
Buzz Aldrin, with
Michael Collins orbiting above during the
Apollo 11 mission. Five other Apollo missions also landed
astronauts on the
Moon, the last one in 1972. These six Apollo spaceflights are the only times humans have landed on another
celestial body. Apollo was the third human spaceflight program undertaken by NASA, the
space agency of the United States. It used
Apollo spacecraft and
Saturn launch vehicles, which were later used for the
Skylab program and the joint American-Soviet
Apollo–Soyuz Test Project. These later programs are thus often considered to be part of the overall Apollo program. The goal of the program, as articulated by President Kennedy, was accomplished with only two major failures. The first failure resulted in the deaths of three astronauts,
Gus Grissom,
Ed White and
Roger Chaffee, in the
Apollo 1 launchpad fire. The second was an in-space explosion on
Apollo 13, which badly damaged the spacecraft on the moonward leg of its journey. The three astronauts aboard narrowly escaped with their lives, thanks to the efforts of flight controllers, project engineers, backup crew members and the skills of the astronauts themselves.
Space Shuttle (USA, 1972–2011) '' launches at the start of
STS-120 NASA's
Space Shuttle, officially called "Space Transportation System" (STS), was a United States government crewed launch vehicle, retired from service in 2011. The winged
Space Shuttle orbiter was launched vertically, usually carrying five to seven
astronauts (although eight have been carried) and up to of payload into
low Earth orbit. When its mission was complete, the shuttle could independently move itself out of orbit (by means of making a 180-degree turn and firing its main engines, thus slowing it down) and
re-enter the Earth's atmosphere. During descent and landing, the orbiter acted as a
glider and made a completely unpowered
runway landing. The Space Shuttle was the only winged spacecraft to achieve orbit and land with crew aboard, and the first of a small number of reusable space vehicles to make multiple flights into orbit (subsequently followed by the
X-37B,
Cargo Dragon, and
Crew Dragon).
Its missions involved carrying large payloads to various low-Earth orbits (including segments to be added to the
International Space Station), providing crew rotation for the International Space Station, and performing service missions to the
Hubble Space Telescope. The orbiter could also recover
satellites and other payloads from orbit and return them to
Earth, but its use in this capacity was rare. However, the Space Shuttle was used to return large payloads from the ISS to Earth, as the Russian
Soyuz spacecraft has limited capacity for return payloads. Each vehicle was designed with a projected lifespan of 100 launches, or 10 years' operational life.
China Manned Space Program (China, 1992–ongoing) of China China was the first Asian country and third nation in the world, after the USSR and USA, to send humans into space. During the
Space Race between the two superpowers, which culminated with
Apollo 11 landing humans on the Moon,
Mao Zedong and
Zhou Enlai decided on 14 July 1967 that China should not be left behind, and initiated their own crewed space program: the top-secret Project 714, which aimed to put two people into space by 1973 with the
Shuguang spacecraft. Nineteen
PLAAF pilots were selected for this goal in March 1971. The Shuguang-1 spacecraft, to be launched with the
CZ-2A rocket, was designed to carry a crew of two. The program was officially cancelled on 13 May 1972 for economic reasons. A second, short-lived crewed program was based on the successful implementation of landing technology by
FSW satellites. It was announced a few times in 1978 with the publishing of some details, including photos, but then was abruptly canceled in 1980. It has been argued that the second crewed program was created solely for propaganda purposes, and was never intended to produce results. In 1992, under
China Manned Space Program (CMS), also known as "Project 921", authorization and funding was given for the first phase of a third, successful attempt at crewed spaceflight. To achieve independent human spaceflight capability, China developed
Shenzhou spacecraft and
Long March 2F rocket dedicated for human spaceflight in the next few years, along with critical infrastructures like new launch site and flight control center being built. The first uncrewed spacecraft,
Shenzhou 1, was launched on 20 November 1999 and recovered the next day, marking the first step of the realization of China's human spaceflight capability. Three more uncrewed missions were conducted in the next few years in order to verify the key technologies. On 15 October 2003
Shenzhou 5, China's first crewed spaceflight mission, put
Yang Liwei in orbit for 21 hours and returned safely back to
Inner Mongolia, making China the third nation to launch a human into orbit independently.
SpaceShipOne / SpaceShipTwo (USA, 2004–ongoing) Virgin Galactic is a company within
Sir Richard Branson's
Virgin Group, which is developing a privately funded spacecraft called
SpaceShipOne and
SpaceShipTwo, in conjunction with
Scaled Composites to offer
sub-orbital spaceflights and later
orbital spaceflights to the paying public. SpaceShipOne reached space with a pilot in three test flights in 2004.
Tier One is
Scaled Composites' program of
suborbital human spaceflight using the
reusable spacecraft SpaceShipOne and its launcher
White Knight. The craft are designed by
Burt Rutan, and the project is funded 20 million US Dollars by
Paul Allen. In 2004 it made the
first privately funded human spaceflight and won the 10 million US Dollars
Ansari X Prize for the first non-governmental reusable crewed spacecraft. The objective of the project is to develop technology for low-cost routine access to space. Tier One is not itself intended to carry paying passengers, but it is envisioned that there will be commercial spinoffs, initially in
space tourism. The company
Mojave Aerospace Ventures was formed to manage commercial exploitation of the technology. A deal with
Virgin Galactic could see routine space tourism, using a spacecraft based on Tier One technology. The model finally developed into
SpaceShipTwo,
Virgin Galactic's second generation suborbital vehicle. On 10 October 2010, VSS
Enterprise, the first SpaceShipTwo spaceplane, made its first crewed gliding test flight. By October 2014 SpaceShipTwo had conducted 54 test flights. On October 31, 2014, SpaceShipTwo VSS
Enterprise suffered an in-flight breakup during a powered flight test, resulting in a crash killing one pilot and injuring the other. The second SpaceShipTwo,
VSS Unity, made first flight tests in 2016.
VSS Unity made
its first spaceflight (according to the U.S. definition of space) on December 13, 2018. Marking the end of the "shuttle gap." VSS Unity made its second spaceflight on February 22, 2019.
Commercial Crew Program (USA, 2011–ongoing) The
Commercial Crew Program is an economic stimulus program funds technology development related to human spaceflight by private companies. In September 2014 NASA awarded contracts to
SpaceX and
Boeing to build crewed spacecraft for low Earth orbit operations.
Dragon 2, the capsule developed by SpaceX, is listed under "successful programs" as it first launched humans to space in May 2020.
Dragon 2 (USA, 2010–ongoing) The
SpaceX Dragon 2 is a development of the robotic Dragon cargo spacecraft which has been re-supplying the International Space Station since 2010. The spacecraft is able to carry a crew of four astronauts to the International Space Station, with a planned maximum capacity of seven. It includes a set of four side-mounted
thruster pods with two
SuperDraco engines each as
Launch Abort System (LAS). To develop Dragon 2, SpaceX did a "pad abort"
test in May 2015. A one-week
uncrewed orbital flight to the ISS occurred in March 2019, an
in-flight abort test was successfully conducted on 19 January 2020. A
crewed demonstration mission to the ISS launched on 30 May 2020. The first operational crewed mission,
Crew-1, flew to the ISS in November 2020 for a six-month stay. Dragon 2 has flown
Inspiration4, the first purely private mission to Earth orbit.
Starliner (USA, 2010–ongoing) The
Boeing Starliner is a class of
space capsules under construction by
Boeing to transport crew to the
International Space Station, and to private space stations such as the proposed
Bigelow Aerospace Commercial Space Station. The Starliner is to support larger crews of up to seven people. The Starliner is designed to be able to remain on-orbit for up to seven months and for reusability for up to ten missions. Starliner made an
uncrewed test flight in December 2019 but failed to reach the ISS.
Another uncrewed flight was launched in May 2022, followed by final certification
crewed demonstration flight to get Starliner operational in June 2024.
New Shepard (USA, 2006–ongoing) The
New Shepard is a
reusable launch system capable of
vertical-takeoff, vertical-landing (VTVL),
suborbital crewed spacecraft by
Blue Origin, a company owned by
Amazon.com founder and businessman
Jeff Bezos, flying humans to space since 2021. It is a commercial system for suborbital
space tourism. The name New Shepard makes reference to the first
United States astronaut in space,
Alan Shepard. The first flight of the New Shepard vehicle was conducted on 29 April 2015 during which an altitude of was attained. While the
test itself was deemed a success and the capsule was correctly recovered via parachute landing, the booster stage
landing failed because hydraulic pressure was lost during the descent. Twelve subsequent flights (through January 2019), including two in-flight abort tests, took place with safe landings of both capsule and booster with two additional vehicles. New Shepard first flew humans to space on 20 July 2021 with the
NS-16 mission. ==Successful space station programs==