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1961  NASA astrochimp Ham on January, 31, 1961, as a Mercury flight propels him 156 miles above Earth.  Glenn’s flight took him around the world three times in under five hours. 566 humans have been to space.  Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin the first man in space on April 12, 1961  on Pad 5 at Cape Canaveral. the first American to launch to space, who carries a portable air conditioner to cool his aluminized pressure suit. Plastic overshoes prevent his flight boots from tracking grit into the space capsule. Evaporating liquid oxygen streams from the poised Redstone rocket.  Alan Shepard in the Atlantic Ocean, May 5, 1961, after the recovery of the Mercury capsule that he rode safely into space and back. His suborbital flight took him to an altitude of 116.5 miles and lasted just 15 minutes. 1962  John Glenn launch on February, 20, 1962 1963  The first woman in space, Russian cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova. On June 16, 1963, she traveled onboard the Vostok 6 spacecraft and orbited Earth 48 times in 70 hours. After her achievement. 1965  Alexei Leonov , became the first human to conduct a spacewalk on March 18, 1965, exiting his capsule during the Voskhod 2 mission for 12 minutes and 9 seconds. Floating 100 miles above Earth,  Edward White, became the first American to perform a spacewalk on June 3, 1965. Maneuvering with a handheld gas gun, White traveled 6,000 miles, from over Hawaii to above Bermuda, in just 21 minutes.  Vladimir Komarov . During the first flight of a new Soyuz vehicle, a parachute failure caused the capsule to crash into the ground after reentry on April 24, 1967, making him the first human to die in a spaceflight. 1966  Neil Armstrong , the 35-year-old astronaut was preparing for his first spaceflight, Gemini 8, which lifted off on March 16, 1966. 1969  The Saturn V rocket leaves NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, Launch Complex 39, Pad A, at 9:30 in the morning on July 16, 1969, launching for the surface of the moon with the Apollo 11 crew: commander Neil Armstrong, command module pilot Michael Collins, and lunar module pilot Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin.  Apollo 11 mission on July 16, 1969.  The 363-foot-tall Saturn V rocket is propelled by the rocket’s first stage, powering five F-1 rocket engines with 203,400 gallons of kerosene fuel and 318,000 gallons of liquid oxygen. A similar rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS), is being built by NASA to take humans back to the moon and to Mars.  The lunar module Eagle carried Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin safely to the moon’s surface and back to lunar orbit.  Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin were the first humans to walk on the moon on July 20, 1969. Armstrong and the lunar module are reflected in the visor of Aldrin, left, as he explores the Sea of Tranquility region of the moon. Armstrong took this photograph with a 70mm lunar surface camera. Aldrin photographed a footprint in the dust, right, which resembled powdered charcoal. 1972  Apollo 16's lunar module pilot Charles Duke found a way to take the family along to the moon in April 1972.  Lunar grime and fatigue color Eugene Cernan’s face after a moonwalk during Apollo 17 in December 1972, the last of the six moon landings. With that mission, the astronauts spent a record three days on the surface and 22 hours outside the lunar module. What had been one small step for Armstrong had turned into a routine stroll for 11 others. 1980  Columbia, the first space shuttle to fly into orbit, underwent final preparations at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in 1980 before its maiden flight in April 1981. 1984  The first to float untethered in space, Bruce McCandless II drifts 217 miles above Earth outside of the space shuttle Challenger using a nitrogen-propelled backpack in February 1984. 1986  seconds after the space shuttle Challenger exploded on January 28, 1986, killing all seven crew members. 73 seconds after launch, its solid rocket boosters careening away wildly. The disaster was triggered by an eroded O-ring in the right booster that allowed hot gases to escape and ignite the main fuel tank. 1995  Polyakov boarded Mir on January 8, 1994, and left the station on March 22, 1995, setting a record of 437 days and 18 hours of continuous time in space. Mir hosted more than a hundred visitors from 12 countries. Designed to last five years, the space station survived 15 before being abandoned and plunging to Earth on March 23, 2001.  after spending a world record 437 days and 18 hours in space. A physician, Polyakov used his stay on Mir to study the effects of prolonged exposure to zero gravity on the body. Despite some bone density loss, he proved that, with exercise, space crews could manage the negative effects of weightlessness on a round­trip to Mars, which could take as long as three years. 2000  two cosmonauts relieve themselves on the tire of their transport bus, in April 2000, before their launch at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Before his historic 1961 flight, Gagarin did it ,Since then, nearly every cosmonaut has honored the tradition. 2003  the space shuttle Columbia, which broke apart on reentry on February 1, 2003, killing all seven crewmembers. A seven-­month investigation found that super-heated air entered the left wing through a breach suffered during launch. 2009  Since the termination of the space shuttle program in 2011, NASA astronauts depend on Russian rockets to the reach the International Space Station. The rocket launched the Expedition 21 crew to the International Space Station on September 30, 2009. 2011  Getting a ride home after 159 days in space, Italian astronaut and Expedition 27 crew member Paolo Nespoli captured this rare view on May 23, 2011 2012  The space shuttle Enterprise passes the Statue of Liberty on June 6, 2012, on its way to the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York City, where it is permanently displayed. 2015  SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule ignites all eight of its SuperDraco engines during a propulsive hover test in Texas in November 2015. Engineers were testing the ability to hover and control the throttling of the engines for a controlled landing in case of an emergency. SpaceX Dragon capsules have been used to take cargo to and from the International Space Station. The first attempt to take humans—NASA Astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken—is scheduled for Wednesday, May 27, 2020. 2016  cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, dressed in a space suit, concentrates on driving a rover on the surface of Mars in a simulation on March 6, 2016, at Star City in Moscow. Just four days after returning to Earth from a year aboard the International Space Station, Kornienko went through 15 to 20 minutes of training that involved simulations of landing on Mars, opening a capsule door opening, setting up an antenna—and then he overcame stairs in the real world with a plastic cane.  Designer and engineer Pablo De Leon wears a prototype NDX-1 space suit being developed for Mars inside the “regolith bin” at Kennedy Space Center's Swamp Works during testing of the space suits’ design elements. The bin features simulated soil and can create dust storms, pictured, similar to storms astronauts would work in on Mars.  Founded in 2002, Space Exploration Technologies, now known as SpaceX was the first to recover the first stage of an orbital rocket for reuse, rather than losing it to the sea. The recovered first stage of a Falcon 9 rocket rests on the drone ship "Of Course I Still Love You" at Port Canaveral, Florida, on May 9, 2016. The first stage landed on the drone ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean after launching the JCSAT-14 communications satellite into orbit on May 5, 2016.  Since 1972, humans haven’t ventured beyond Earth’s orbit. NASA plans to send humans back to the moon by 2024. Perhaps in the 2030s or 2040s, humans will travel to Mars. Taskin Padir, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Northeastern University, believes that the first footprints on Mars might be those of robots like Valkyrie, being tested in his lab. Robots could build a base before humans arrive on the planet. Later they’d do chores, such as cleaning dust off solar panels.  In 2016, engineers suited up test dummies during drop tests at NASA Langley Research Center’s 20-foot-deep Hydro Impact Basin. The space agency was simulating the force of impact that astronauts would experience when splashing down in the Pacific Ocean. Two years earlier, NASA awarded a total of $6.8 billion in contracts to SpaceX and Boeing to launch astronauts to the International Space Station as part of the Commercial Crew Program. 2018  SpaceX launches a Falcon 9 rocket with a payload for Argentina's space agency, the SAOCOM 1A satellite, on October 7, 2018.  The Soyuz MS-06 spacecraft lands with Expedition 53 and 54 crew members, NASA astronauts Joe Acaba and Mark Vande Hei and cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin, near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan, on February 28, 2018. The astronauts returned after 168 days in space. 2019  All Soviet and Russian human launches have used essentially the same rocket design with modifications since the 1960s. Engines light up the pad as the Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft lifts off with Expedition 61 crew members Jessica Meir of NASA and Oleg Skripochka of Roscosmos, as well as astronaut Hazza Ali Almansoori of the United Arab Emirates, on September 25, 2019, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.  The same Soyuz MS-15 launch shown in the previous photo was photographed by NASA astronaut Christina Koch from the International Space Station on the same day, September 25, 2019, as the Soyuz spacecraft enters orbit. 2020  NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken don SpaceX space to fly on the company’s first crewed mission, Demo-2 on Wednesday, May 27.