Timeline of space travel by nationality

Map of countries (and successor states) whose citizens have flown in space as of January 2024. Countries represented only by suborbital space flyers are shaded.
Note: citizens from the now-defunct East Germany, Czechoslovakia, and Soviet Union have also flown in space.

Since the first human spaceflight by the Soviet Union, citizens of 47 countries have flown in space. For each nationality, the launch date of the first mission is listed. The list is based on the nationality of the person at the time of the launch. Only 7 of 48 countries have been represented by female "first flyers" (Helen Sharman for the United Kingdom in 1991, Anousheh Ansari for Iran in 2006, Yi So-yeon for South Korea in 2008, Sara Sabry for Egypt in 2022, and Keisha Schahaff and Anastatia Mayers for Antigua and Barbuda in 2023, Namira Salim for Pakistan in 2023, Marina Vasilevskaya for Belarus in 2024). Only three nations (Soviet Union/Russia, U.S., China) have launched their own crewed spacecraft, with the Soviets/Russians and the American programs providing rides to other nations' astronauts. Twenty-eight "first flights" occurred on Soviet or Russian flights while the United States carried eighteen.

Timeline

Note: All dates given are UTC. Countries indicated in bold have achieved independent human spaceflight capability.

No. Country Name Flight Date (UTC)
1960s
1  Soviet Union[a] Yuri Gagarin Soviet Union Vostok 1 12 April 1961
2  United States[b] Alan Shepard United States MR-3 5 May 1961
1970s
3  Czechoslovakia Vladimír Remek Soviet Union Soyuz 28 2 March 1978
4  Poland Mirosław Hermaszewski Soviet Union Soyuz 30 27 June 1978
5  East Germany[c] Sigmund Jähn Soviet Union Soyuz 31 26 August 1978
6  Bulgaria Georgi Ivanov Soviet Union Soyuz 33 10 April 1979
1980s
7  Hungary Bertalan Farkas Soviet Union Soyuz 36 26 May 1980
8  Vietnam Phạm Tuân Soviet Union Soyuz 37 23 July 1980
9  Cuba Arnaldo Tamayo Méndez Soviet Union Soyuz 38 18 September 1980
10  Mongolia Jügderdemidiin Gürragchaa Soviet Union Soyuz 39 22 March 1981
11  Romania Dumitru Prunariu Soviet Union Soyuz 40 14 May 1981
12  France Jean-Loup Chrétien Soviet Union Soyuz T-6 24 June 1982
13  West Germany[c] Ulf Merbold United States STS-9 28 November 1983
14  India Rakesh Sharma Soviet Union Soyuz T-11 3 April 1984
15  Canada Marc Garneau United States STS-41-G 5 October 1984
16  Saudi Arabia Sultan al-Saud United States STS-51-G 17 June 1985
17  Netherlands Wubbo Ockels United States STS-61-A 30 October 1985
18  Mexico Rodolfo Neri Vela United States STS-61-B 26 November 1985
19  Syria Muhammed Faris Soviet Union Soyuz TM-3 22 July 1987
20  Afghanistan Abdul Ahad Momand Soviet Union Soyuz TM-6 29 August 1988
1990s
21  Japan Toyohiro Akiyama[d][1] Soviet Union Soyuz TM-11 2 December 1990
22  United Kingdom Helen Sharman[d][1] Soviet Union Soyuz TM-12 18 May 1991
23  Austria Franz Viehböck Soviet Union Soyuz TM-13 2 October 1991
24  Russia[a] Aleksandr Kaleri
Aleksandr Viktorenko
Russia Soyuz TM-14 17 March 1992
25  Belgium Dirk Frimout United States STS-45 24 March 1992
26  Italy Franco Malerba United States STS-46 31 July 1992
27   Switzerland Claude Nicollier
28  Ukraine[a] Leonid Kadenyuk United States STS-87 19 November 1997
29  Spain Pedro Duque United States STS-95 29 October 1998
30  Slovakia[e] Ivan Bella Russia Soyuz TM-29 20 February 1999
2000s
31  South Africa Mark Shuttleworth[d][2] Russia Soyuz TM-34 25 April 2002
32  Israel[f] Ilan Ramon United States STS-107 16 January 2003
33  China Yang Liwei China Shenzhou 5 15 October 2003
34  Brazil Marcos Pontes Russia Soyuz TMA-8 30 March 2006
35  Iran[g] Anousheh Ansari[d][3] Russia Soyuz TMA-9 18 September 2006
36  Sweden Christer Fuglesang United States STS-116 10 December 2006
37  Malaysia Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor Russia Soyuz TMA-11 10 October 2007
38  South Korea Yi So-yeon Russia Soyuz TMA-12 8 April 2008
2010s
39  Denmark Andreas Mogensen Russia Soyuz TMA-18M 2 September 2015
40  Kazakhstan[a] Aidyn Aimbetov
41  United Arab Emirates Hazza Al Mansouri Russia Soyuz MS-15 25 September 2019
2020s
42  Australia[h] Chris Boshuizen[d][4] United States Blue Origin NS-18 13 October 2021
43  Portugal[h] Mário Ferreira[d] United States Blue Origin NS-22 4 August 2022
44  Egypt[h] Sara Sabry[d]
45  Antigua and Barbuda[h] Keisha Schahaff[d]
Anastatia Mayers[d]
United States Galactic 02[i] 10 August 2023
46  Pakistan[h] Namira Salim[d] United States Galactic 04[i] 6 October 2023
47 Turkey Turkey Alper Gezeravcı United States Axiom Mission 3 18 January 2024
48 Belarus Belarus[a] Marina Vasilevskaya Russia Soyuz MS-25 23 March 2024

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f The first cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin, held citizenship in both the Soviet Union and the Russian SFSR, according to the applicable provisions of the Constitution of the Soviet Union. On 26 December 1991, the Soviet Union dissolved, and was replaced by Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan; Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania restored their independence. At the time of the dissolution, Sergei Krikalev and Alexander Volkov were orbiting Earth on Mir, having been launched into orbit as Soviet citizens, and having returned to the Earth as Russian citizens. Aleksandr Kaleri and Aleksandr Viktorenko were the first Russians to be launched into orbit as Russian citizens only, their launch having occurred subsequent to the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
  2. ^ a b Shepard's spaceflight was suborbital. The first American to be launched into Earth orbit was John Glenn, on 20 February 1962.
  3. ^ a b c In 1978, both Jähn himself and the German Democratic Republic pronounced him the "first German in space", rather than the first "citizen of the German Democratic Republic in space". In 1990, the states of the former East Germany acceded to the Federal Republic of Germany. On 22 January 1992, Ulf Merbold again traveled into space, now representing the reunited Germany within the Federal Republic of Germany. Jähn is, nevertheless, still considered the first German in space, even in the states of the Federal Republic of Germany that comprised the former West Germany.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k This person flew as a commercial, non-governmental space traveller. Apart from Akiyama and Sharman, these space travellers are known as space tourists.
  5. ^ a b In 1993, Czechoslovakia dissolved and was replaced by the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
  6. ^ a b Ilan Ramon was the first Israeli to go into space, but Ramon died during reentry during the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster. His close friend and colleague, Eytan Stibbe, would later become the first Israeli to return from space alive, with the conclusion of Axiom-1 in 2022.
  7. ^ a b Although recognized as an Iranian citizen by Iranian law, Ansari is also an American citizen and was prohibited from wearing Iranian state symbols by both the United States and Russian governments.
  8. ^ a b c d e f This flight was suborbital.
  9. ^ a b c This was a suborbital flight aboard a SpaceShipTwo vehicle. SpaceShipTwo flights surpass the U.S. definition of spaceflight (50 mi (80.47 km)), but fall short of the Kármán line (100 km (62.14 mi)), the FAI definition used for most space recordkeeping.

Other claims

The above list uses the nationality at the time of launch. Lists with differing criteria might include the following people:

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b "BBC News - Sci/Tech - Expensive ticket to ride". News.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  2. ^ "BBC News - SCI/TECH - Space tourist lifts off". News.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  3. ^ "BBC NEWS - Science/Nature - Lift-off for woman space tourist". News.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  4. ^ "'It's not tourism for me': Meet Australia's next space traveller". smh.com.au. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  5. ^ MAN IN THE NEWS: FRANKLIN R. CHANG-DIAZ; A DREAMER IN SPACE, Malcolm W. Browne, The New York Times, January 13, 1986
  6. ^ "КАЗКОСМОС | Мусабаев Талгат Амангельдиевич". Archived from the original on 2015-04-29. Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  7. ^ Bukharbayeva, Bagila (20 June 2004). "Kazakhstan Gets a Bigger Say in Space Launch Site". Articles.latimes.com. Retrieved 11 August 2017.

External links

  • Current Space Demographics, compiled by William Harwood, CBS News Space Consultant, and Rob Navias, NASA.
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