![]()  | |
| Orbital launches | |
|---|---|
| First | 6 January | 
| Last | 28 December | 
| Total | 131 | 
| Catalogued | 128 | 
| National firsts | |
| Satellite | |
| Rockets | |
| Maiden flights | Thor DSV-2U | 
| Retirements | Voskhod Scout B-1 Soyuz Soyuz-M Thor-Burner  | 
| Crewed flights | |
| Orbital | 3 | 
| Total travellers | 6 | 
The following is an outline of 1976 in spaceflight.
Launches
| Date and time (UTC) | Rocket | Flight number | Launch site | LSP | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Payload (⚀ = CubeSat)  | 
Operator | Orbit | Function | Decay (UTC) | Outcome | ||
| Remarks | |||||||
| 15 January 05:34:00  | 
|||||||
| NASA / DFVLR | Heliocentric | Solar probe | In orbit | Successful | |||
| Achieved a closest approach to the Sun of 43.432 million km (0.29 AU) on 17 April 1976, the closest approach achieved by an artificial satellite; it was succeeded by the Parker Solar Probe in 2018. | |||||||
| 15 March 01:25:40[1]  | 
|||||||
| MIT Lincoln Laboratory | Geosynchronous | Technology demonstration | In orbit | Successful | |||
| MIT Lincoln Laboratory | Geosynchronous | Technology demonstration | In orbit | Successful | |||
| NRL | Geosynchronous | Heliophysics | In orbit | Successful | |||
| NRL | Geosynchronous | Heliophysics | In orbit | Successful | |||
| LES-8 was decommissioned in 2004; LES-9, the last Lincoln Experimental Satellite, continued functioning for 44 years and was finally decommissioned in 2020.[2] | |||||||
| 22 June 18:04:00  | 
|||||||
| Low Earth | Space station | 8 August 1977 | Successful | ||||
| Visited by three crews, one of which failed to dock | |||||||
| 6 July 12:08:45  | 
|||||||
| Low Earth (Salyut 5) | Salyut expedition | 24 August 18:32:17  | Partial mission failure | ||||
| Crewed flight with two cosmonauts, final flight of Soyuz 11A511, returned early due to crew illness | |||||||
| 9 August 12:08:45  | 
|||||||
| Luna 24 | Selenocentric | Lunar lander | 22 August | Successful | |||
| Third uncrewed lunar sample return, Third Soviet lunar sample return | |||||||
| 15 September 09:48:30  | 
|||||||
| Low Earth | Salyut expedition | 23 September 07:40:47  | Successful | ||||
| Crewed flight with two cosmonauts | |||||||
| 14 October 17:39:18  | 
|||||||
| Low Earth (Intended: Salyut 5) | Salyut expedition | 16 October 17:45:53  | Spacecraft failure | ||||
| Crewed flight with two cosmonauts, failed to dock with Salyut 5 | |||||||
Launches from the Moon
| Date and time (UTC) | Rocket | Flight number | Launch site | LSP | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Payload (⚀ = CubeSat)  | 
Operator | Orbit | Function | Decay (UTC) | Outcome | ||
| Remarks | |||||||
| 19 August 5:25  | 
Mare Crisium (Luna) | ||||||
| Highly elliptical | Sample return | 22 August 1976 | Successful | ||||
| Third uncrewed lunar sample return mission | |||||||
Deep space rendezvous
| Date | Spacecraft | Event | Remarks | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 19 June | Viking 1 | Areocentric orbit insertion | |
| 20 July | Viking 1 Lander | landed in Chryse Planitia | |
| 7 August | Viking 2 | Areocentric orbit insertion | |
| 18 August | Luna 24 | landed in Mare Crisium | sample return mission | 
| 19 August | Luna 24 | lift-off from Mare Crisium | 170 grams (6.0 oz) | 
| 3 September | Viking 2 Lander | landed in Utopia Planitia | 
References
- Bergin, Chris. "NASASpaceFlight.com".
 - Clark, Stephen. "Spaceflight Now".
 - Kelso, T.S. "Satellite Catalog (SATCAT)". CelesTrak.
 - Krebs, Gunter. "Chronology of Space Launches".
 - Kyle, Ed. "Space Launch Report". Archived from the original on 5 October 2009. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
 - McDowell, Jonathan. "Jonathan's Space Report".
 - Pietrobon, Steven. "Steven Pietrobon's Space Archive".
 - Wade, Mark. "Encyclopedia Astronautica".
 - Webb, Brian. "Southwest Space Archive".
 - Zak, Anatoly. "Russian Space Web".
 - "ISS Calendar". Spaceflight 101.
 - "NSSDCA Master Catalog". NASA Space Science Data Coordinated Archive. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.
 - "Space Calendar". NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
 - "Space Information Center". JAXA.
 - "Хроника освоения космоса" [Chronicle of space exploration]. CosmoWorld (in Russian).
 
Footnotes
- ↑ McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log". Jonathan's Space Report. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
 - ↑ Ryan, Dorothy (27 May 2020). "Lincoln Laboratory decommissions Lincoln Experimental Satellite–9". MIT. Archived from the original on 2 February 2023. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
 
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