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Hitching rides on 13 spacecraft, more than 600 humans have been to space

  • In this image the Tianhe core module of China's space...

    Anonymous/AP

    In this image the Tianhe core module of China's space station is seen prior to docking in space with a Shenzhou-12 spaceship carrying a crew of Chinese astronauts on Thursday, June 17, 2021. A new six-person unnamed Chinese spacecraft may be replacing the Shenzhou as the main means of transport to and from the future modular Chinese Space Station, after an uncrewed flight occurred on May 5, 2020. The ship has has a length of 28.9 feet (8.8 meters) and a maximum diameter of 14.8 feet (4.5 meters). Liftoff mass is 47,619 pounds (21.6 metric tons). Crewed flights are possible for 2021. (CCTV via AP Video)

  • In this image, from video made available by SpaceX, a...

    AP

    In this image, from video made available by SpaceX, a Starship test vehicle sits on the ground after returning from a flight test in Boca Chica, Texas on Wednesday, May 5, 2021. A private crewed mission to slingshot around the moon is planned for 2023. The Starship upper stage is expected to have a 29.5 feet (9 meter diameter), be 164 feet (50 meters) tall, and be capable of being a fully reusable spacecraft with a dry mass of 240,000 pounds (120 tons) or less, powered by six Raptor engines. (SpaceX via AP)

  • The first successful crewed flight on SpaceShipTwo occurred on Dec....

    Virgin Galactic/AP

    The first successful crewed flight on SpaceShipTwo occurred on Dec. 13, 2018, although the first-ever crewed flight occurred unsuccessfully on Oct. 31, 2014, during a test flight where one pilot was killed. The craft has currently completed four crewed flights above 50 miles (80 kilometers). The most recent flight occurred on July 11, 2021 and included Richard Branson in it's crew. SpaceShipTwo's crew cabin is 12 feet (3.7 meters) long and 7 feet 7 inches (2.3 meters) in diameter.

  • Crew Dragon Demo-2 was the first crewed test flight of...

    AP

    Crew Dragon Demo-2 was the first crewed test flight of the Crew Dragon spacecraft and launched on May 30, 2020. The craft is manufactured and developed by American aerospace manufacturer SpaceX. The Crew Dragon Endeavour craft that was launched in May had a launch mass of 27,600 pounds (12,519 kilograms) and has a dimension of 14.4 feet tall (4.4 meters) by 12 feet (3.66 meters) in diameter. Crew Dragon is still operational and has currently completed four successful launches although the Endeavour itself has only completed the one crewed launch.

  • A Vostok rocket similar to the one that carried Yuri...

    Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP

    A Vostok rocket similar to the one that carried Yuri Gagarin on his flight to space is displayed in Moscow, Russia, Friday, April 9, 2021. Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space 60 years ago on Vostok 1. The successful one-orbit flight on April 12, 1961 made the 27-year-old Gagarin a national hero and cemented Soviet supremacy in space until the United States put a man on the moon more than eight years later. The ship was only 7 feet and 6.5 inches in diameter. The ship went on for six missions and although many more were planned, they were canceled in early 1964.

  • Major Robert M. White is seen here next to the...

    NASA Images / Orlando Sentinel

    Major Robert M. White is seen here next to the X-15 aircraft after a research flight. White was one of the initial pilots selected for the X-15 program, representing the Air Force in the joint program with NASA, the Navy, and North American Aviation. Between April 13, 1960 and December 14, 1962, he made 16 flights in the rocket-powered aircraft. Manufactured by North American Aviation, Inc., three rocket-powered X-15s flew a total of 199 times, with North American pilot Scott Crossfield making the first, unpowered glide flight on June 8, 1959. The ship flew two X-15 flights above the 62 miles (100 kilometer) line occurring in 1963, with an additional 11 flights between 1962 and 1968, which reached altitudes between 50-62 miles (80–100 kilometers), which were recognized as spaceflights by U.S. authorities. The ship was retired in December of 1968. ?(Photo Courtesy of NASA Images)

  • The Soviet Space Program developed the Soyuz in the 1960s...

    AP

    The Soviet Space Program developed the Soyuz in the 1960s and the program is still active, known to have flown more than 140 flights. The first flight was uncrewed and on Nov. 28, 1966. The first mission with a crew launched on April 23, 1967 but ended with a crash in which the cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov was killed due to a parachute failure. The first successful crewed mission was not until Oct. 26, 1968 and was ridden by Georgy Beregovoy. The capsules have changed throughout the years with a total of ten different crewed Soyuz models.

  • Konstantin Feoktistov, left, is seen in 1967 with Russia's first...

    Ria Novosti / European Pressphoto Agency

    Konstantin Feoktistov, left, is seen in 1967 with Russia's first cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin. Feoktistov was aboard Voskhod 1 in October 1964 with Vladimir Komarov and Boris Yegorov in the first group space flight in history. The spacecraft had a mass of 12,535 pounds (5686 kilograms) and was 16.4 feet (5 meters) long in diameter. The Soviet space program launched their second mission on March 18, 1965 where cosmonaut Alexei Leonov took the first space walk and was outside of the craft for 10 minutes. The flight flew with one other cosmonaut and was Voskhod's last mission.

  • The Boeing CST 100 Starliner need to launch an uncrewed...

    AP

    The Boeing CST 100 Starliner need to launch an uncrewed test flight to the ISS from Cape Canaveral again. This will be the ship's second uncrewed launch. The first launch occurred on Dec. 20 in 2019. The capsule has a diameter of 15 feet and can hold up to seven people. The spacecraft is expected to complete a crewed launch by before the end of 2022.

  • The U.S. single-seat SpaceShipOne aircraft has completed three flights above...

    ROBERT LABERGE/GETTY IMAGES

    The U.S. single-seat SpaceShipOne aircraft has completed three flights above the Karman line which all occurred in 2004. The first flight ever occurred on May 20, 2003 and was an uncrewed captive flight test. The craft was retired by Oct. 4, 2004 and completed a total of 17 flights, one being uncrewed, with a highest altitude of 69.6 miles (112.014 kilometers) on the last flight. Two other flights reached over 49.7 miles (80 kilometers). The length of the craft was16.4 feet (5 meters) and a diameter of 4.9 feet (1.52 meters).

  • Chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation Kailasavadivoo Sivan gestures...

    MANJUNATH KIRAN/Getty

    Chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation Kailasavadivoo Sivan gestures as he announces ISRO's plans for 2020 including the progress in 'Chandrayaan 3' moon mission and 'Gaganyaan' mission for putting an Indian astronaut into space. The three-person orbital spacecraft is intended to be the first crewed spacecraft of the Indian Human Spaceflight Programme. The first crewed flight is planned for 2023. The craft is 11.5 feet (3.5 meters) in diameter and 11.7 feet (3.58 meters) in height.

  • After the Apollo program ended in 1972, NASA took a...

    HO / AFP/Getty Images

    After the Apollo program ended in 1972, NASA took a short break before heading forward with their space program in the form of a Space Shuttle. NASA built a total of five different shuttles from 1981 to 2011, completing a total of 135 crewed missions.

  • The Orel, a Russian four person lunar-capable spacecraft, is set...

    AP

    The Orel, a Russian four person lunar-capable spacecraft, is set to eventually replace the Soyuz rocket. The first crewed flight is planned for 2025. The ship can hold a crew of 4-6 people and has a dry mass of 30,864 pounds (14,000 kilograms) and a launch mass of 37,478 pounds (17,000 kilograms). (Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service photo via AP)

  • Astronaut Alan Shepard was launched into space on May 5,...

    AP

    Astronaut Alan Shepard was launched into space on May 5, 1961 atop a Mercury-Redstone rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla. Freedom 7 was the first American manned suborbital space flight, making Shepard the first American in space. The launch was the third conducted but the first with a human. The craft conducted a total of six launches with the last being on July 21, 1961. The craft was 83 feet (25.41 meters) tall and 5.8 feet (1.78 meters) wide with a mass of 66,138 pounds (30,000 kilograms).

  • The Chinese Shenzhou spacecraft program was relaunched in 1992 after...

    Ng Han Guan/AP

    The Chinese Shenzhou spacecraft program was relaunched in 1992 after efforts failed in the 1980s due to lack of funds. The first launch occurred on Nov. 19, 1999 although the first crewed launch did not occur until Oct. 15, 2003 on the Shenzhou 5 mission. The craft has a launch mass of 17,284 pounds (7840 kilograms) and has dimensions of 30.3 feet (9.25 meter) by 9.1 feet (2.8 meters). The design of the ship is very similar to the Russian Soyuz and has currently completed 12 launches. The Shenzhou is still in service.

  • Blue Origin's New Shepard crew Jeff Bezos, Wally Funk, Oliver...

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Blue Origin's New Shepard crew Jeff Bezos, Wally Funk, Oliver Daemen, and Mark Bezos were the first human spaceflight for the company. The launch occurred out of Texas on July 20 in the 59 foot tall craft. The New Shepard originally launched for the first time in April of 2015. The July launch was the 16th launch, although it was the first one launched with passengers aboard. The craft can hold up to six people.

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Richard Tribou, Orlando Sentinel staff portrait in Orlando, Fla., Tuesday, July 19, 2022. (Willie J. Allen Jr./Orlando Sentinel)
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When the SpaceX Dragon Endurance took flight atop a Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday, it marked the fifth flight to carry humans aboard the commercially built spacecraft.

It also transported among its four passengers the 600th human to make it into space. Three of the four Crew-3 astronauts are space rookies.

Based on his mission assignment from NASA, European Space Agency astronaut Matthias Maurer, takes the 600th spot. The flight also took Kayla Barron, the 601st person to space, in that she was the last of the four assigned to the crew in May.

No. 599 is mission commander Raja Chari, while Thomas Marshburn punched his first spaceflight ticket in 2009 on STS-127 aboard Space Shuttle Endeavour and then again on a Soyuz flight in 2012. This is his third flight.

In all, with SpaceX’s latest, 13 types of spacecraft have made 354 trips to space with humans along for the ride since Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space in 1961.

This graphic shows the 13 spacecraft used on 354 flights that have transported more than 600 humans into space as of Nov. 10, 2021.
This graphic shows the 13 spacecraft used on 354 flights that have transported more than 600 humans into space as of Nov. 10, 2021.

SpaceX itself has been responsible for 18 humans in the past 18 months.

“Human spaceflight was the reason we were founded, so it’s incredibly meaningful to the whole team,” said SpaceX’s director of Dragon missions Sarah Walker. “We could not be more excited to finally be here and to be standing on the shoulders of giants with this partnership with NASA learning everything that we can … just really dawning a new era of spaceflight and all the possibilities that come with that.”

Just since July, five spacecraft on seven flights have taken 28 people into space.

The definition of space includes the lower threshold of 50 miles set by the U.S. Air Force to be considered an astronaut. Others consider 100 kilometers, known as the Karman line, as the altitude needed to have made it to space. That’s about 62 miles.

From the 13 spacecraft, four have been created by commercial companies with the other nine from government programs: one from China, three from either the Soviet Union or Russia and five from the U.S.

That includes the X-15 rocket-powered jet that took eight pilots past 50 miles altitude in the 1960s.

NASA has also run through its Mercury, Gemini, Apollo and Space Shuttle programs, and Russia and the former Soviet Union have launched cosmonauts on Vostok, Voskhod and Soyuz spacecraft, China has launched taikonauts on Shenzhou spacecraft, and private companies have sent humans into space on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon, Blue Origin’s New Shepard and Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipOne and SpaceShipTwo.

The Soyuz program is the longest running, and continues to send NASA astronauts, Russian cosmonauts and civilians into space with launches from Kazakhstan to the International Space Station. It started in 1967 and has logged 146 launches in which its occupants passed 50 miles altitude, although two of those were aborted before reaching orbit.

The Space Shuttle program lasted from 1981-2011 and has logged the second most having reached space with 134 missions, which does not include Space Shuttle Challenger explosion shortly after liftoff.

After that, the most any one spacecraft has flown with humans are the 15 among the Apollo, Apollo-Soyuz and Skylab flights from 1967-1975. The X-15 sent 13 missions past 50 miles while Gemini hit 10.

The rest had less than 10 each, but both China’s continued spaceflights as well as more flights by private companies will see those spacecraft numbers grow.

SpaceX, for instance, now has four Crew Dragon capsules. The first to fly with humans, Endeavour, took NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to space in May 2020 on a demonstration flight. Since then it has rolled out Resilience used on the first operational flight Crew-1, re-used Endeavour for Crew-2, re-used Resilience for the all-civilian orbital Inspiration4 mission and just sent Crew-3 up on Endurance. The fourth capsule has yet to be named but SpaceX plans to use it next year.

SpaceX will continue flying its rotational crewed missions to the ISS, which go up about once every six months as one of two companies awarded the transportation contract as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. It will also fly civilian missions to the ISS and potentially more civilian orbital flights. It has five flights in the books and is slated to fly at least three more in 2022 for Crew-4 and Crew-5 plus at least one private flight to the ISS through the space tourism company Axiom.

Benji Reed, senior director of Human Spaceflight Programs at SpaceX, said ahead of Inspiration4 that the company could fly as many as six civilian flights annually on top of its NASA responsibilities.

“There’s nothing really that limits our capability to launch,” he said. “It’s about having rockets and Dragons ready to go and having everything in the manifest align with our other launches.”

The other company building a spacecraft for NASA, and could open up to civilian flights, is Boeing with its CST-100 Starliner. It has yet to complete its uncrewed demonstration flight to the ISS and awaits the conclusion of that before its planned crewed demonstration flight and future missions for crew rotation to the station.

Another NASA-related spacecraft slated to eventually fly humans into space is the Orion capsule. An uncrewed version of Orion is set to launch atop the Space Launch System rocket from Kennedy Space Center on Artemis I as early as February 2022 with the crewed Artemis II flight to orbit the moon now targeting May 2024.

And SpaceX continues work on its next-generation human-rated spacecraft, Starship, a version of which is being developed to be the Human Landing System for the Artemis III mission that would transport Orion passengers to the lunar surface potentially in 2025.

The big jump in space travelers, though, will come from suborbital flights in the coming years.

Private companies Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic take short trips to the edge of space. Blue Origin to date has launched twice with humans in its automated New Shepard capsule. Billionaire Jeff Bezos took the first flight this past July with Star Trek star William Shatner headlining the second flight.

Those trips take less than 12 minutes from liftoff to landing, but do pass the Karman line for a short experience of weightlessness and passengers’ ability to see the curvature of the Earth.

Fellow Billionaire Richard Branson beat Bezos to space, although only passing the 50-mile threshold, when he flew aboard his Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo in July. That rocket-powered spacecraft had previously taken several test pilots and passengers into what the company deems space. Future versions of the company’s spacecraft plan to reach higher altitudes.

Other private companies may yet develop more human-rated spacecraft. Sierra Space, which branched off of Sierra Nevada Corp., developed its Dream Chaser craft that is slated to be used as a cargo-only supplier to the ISS in 2022 atop a United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket, which is still in development. The company had originally pitched a version of it for human flight, but lost out to SpaceX and Boeing. The company has stated it still plans to pursue a crewed version by 2025.

Meanwhile, the governments of China, Russia and India are pursuing new spacecraft as well.

The speed with which space travel is expanding plays into plans of people like Bezos, whose Blue Origin mission statement is “millions of people living and working in space” and SpaceX founder Elon Musk, whose company’s goal is to eventually create a colony on Mars.

“The critical breakthrough that’s needed for us to be a space-faring civilization is to make space travel like air travel,” Musk stated in a 2019 speech detailing plans for Starship. “We’re really right on the cusp of what’s physically possible.”