Date and time (UTC)
|
Rocket
|
Flight number
|
Launch site
|
LSP
|
|
Payload
|
Operator
|
Orbit
|
Function
|
Decay (UTC)
|
Outcome
|
Remarks
|
January
|
12 January 09:30[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 390 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
25 January[3] |
Successful
|
14 January 12:00:00[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 391 (DS-P1-I No.10)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Radar target |
21 February 1972[3] |
Successful
|
20 January 11:24:00[1]
|
Vostok-2M
|
|
Plesetsk 41/1
|
|
|
Meteor 1-07 (Meteor-M)[5][6]
|
|
Sun-synchronous
|
Weather |
14 July 2005[3] |
Successful
|
21 January 08:40[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 392 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
2 February[3] |
Successful
|
21 January 18:20
|
Titan III(23)B
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-4W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 7776 (Gambit-3 4330)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
9 February |
Successful
|
OPS 7776 SRV-1
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
January |
Successful
|
OPS 7776 SRV-2
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
February |
Successful
|
26 January 00:36:03
|
Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-36A
|
|
|
Intelsat IV F-2
|
Intelsat
|
Geosynchronous
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
26 January 12:44:33[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 393 (DS-P1-Yu No.34)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
16 June[3] |
Successful
|
31 January 21:03
|
Saturn V
|
|
Kennedy LC-39A
|
NASA
|
|
Apollo 14 CSM
|
NASA
|
Selenocentric
|
Lunar orbiter |
9 February 21:05 |
Successful
|
Apollo 14 LM
|
NASA
|
Selenocentric
|
Lunar lander |
5 February 09:17 |
Successful
|
Crewed flight with three astronauts, third crewed Lunar landing
|
February
|
3 February 01:41:40
|
Delta M
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-17A
|
|
|
NATO-2B
|
NATO
|
Geosynchronous
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Final flight of Delta M
|
9 February 18:48:48[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 394 (DS-P1-M No.2)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ASAT target |
25 February (destroyed) |
Successful
|
Destroyed by Kosmos 397, debris still in orbit
|
16 February 04:00:00
|
Mu-3S
|
|
Kagoshima LA-M
|
ISAS
|
|
Tansei 1
|
ISAS
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
In orbit |
Successful
|
17 February 03:52:05
|
Thor LV-2F Burner II
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-10W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 5268 (DAPP-5A F-3)
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Weather |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Calsphere 3 (NRL PL-170A)
|
NRL
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
17 October 1989 |
Successful
|
Calsphere 4 (NRL PL-170B)
|
NRL
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
20 September 1989 |
Successful
|
Calsphere 5 (NRL PL-170C)
|
NRL
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
7 January 1990 |
Successful
|
17 February 20:04:30
|
Thorad SLV-2H Agena-D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-3W
|
US Air Force
|
|
KH-4B No.1113
|
NRO
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
+18 seconds |
Launch failure
|
Engine failure due to chain of malfunctions caused by fuel additive loading error
|
17 February 21:09[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 395 (Tselina-OM)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
6 April 1980 |
Successful
|
18 February 13:59[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 396 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
3 March[3] |
Successful
|
25 February 11:11[9]
|
Tsyklon-2
|
|
Baikonur 90/19
|
|
|
Kosmos 397 (IS-A)
|
|
Initial: Low Earth Final: Medium Earth
|
ASAT test |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Intercepted and destroyed Kosmos 394
|
26 February 05:06[1]
|
Soyuz-L
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 398 (LK T2K No.2)
|
|
Deployed: Low Earth Final: Medium Earth
|
Test flight |
10 December 1995[3] |
Successful
|
March
|
3 March 09:30[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 399 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
17 March[3] |
Successful
|
3 March 12:15[6]
|
Long March 1
|
|
Jiuquan LA-2A
|
|
|
Shijian 1
|
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
17 June 1979 |
Successful
|
5 March 08:15:02[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Kapustin Yar 86/4
|
|
|
DS-P1-Yu No.39
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Calibration |
+133 seconds |
Launch failure
|
Second stage malfunction, failed to orbit[10]
|
5 March[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Zenit-2M[7]
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
5 March[3] |
Launch failure
|
Nauka 2KS No.3[6]
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
|
13 March 16:15:00
|
Delta M6
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-17A
|
|
|
Explorer 43 (IMP-6)
|
NASA
|
Highly elliptical
|
Gamma-ray astronomy |
2 October 1974 |
Successful
|
Only flight of Delta M6
|
18 March 21:45:00[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 400 (DS-P1-M No.3)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ASAT target |
4 April (destroyed) |
Successful
|
Destroyed by Kosmos 402, debris still in orbit
|
21 March 03:45
|
Titan III(33)B
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-4W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 4788 (Jumpseat)
|
NRO
|
Molniya
|
ELINT |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Maiden flight of Titan III(33)B, first Jumpseat satellite
|
24 March 21:05
|
Thorad SLV-2H Agena-D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-3W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 5300 (KH-4B No.1115)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
12 April |
|
27 March 10:59[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 401 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
9 April[3] |
Successful
|
April
|
1 April 02:57:07
|
Delta E1
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-2E
|
|
|
ISIS 2
|
CSA/NASA
|
Low Earth
|
Ionospheric |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Final flight of Delta E1
|
1 April 11:29[9]
|
Tsyklon-2
|
|
Baikonur 90/20
|
|
|
Kosmos 402 (US-A)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Ocean surveillance |
6 May |
Successful
|
2 April 08:20[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 403 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
14 April[3] |
Successful
|
4 April 14:27[9]
|
Tsyklon-2
|
|
Baikonur 90/19
|
|
|
Kosmos 404 (IS-A)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ASAT test |
4 April |
Successful
|
Intercepted and destroyed Kosmos 400
|
7 April 07:10[1]
|
Vostok-2M
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Kosmos 405 (Tselina-D)[11]
|
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
3 November 2023 03:27[12] |
Successful
|
14 April 08:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Kosmos 406 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
24 April[3] |
Successful
|
15 April 09:19
|
Diamant B
|
|
Kourou ALD
|
CNES
|
|
Tournesol
|
CNES
|
Low Earth
|
Ionospheric |
28 January 1980 |
Successful
|
17 April 11:44:58[1]
|
Vostok-2M
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Meteor 1-08 (Meteor-M)[5][6]
|
|
Sun-synchronous
|
Weather |
10 January 1991[3] |
Successful
|
19 April 01:40:00[13]
|
Proton-K
|
|
Baikonur 81/24
|
|
|
Salyut 1
|
|
Low Earth
|
Space station |
11 October[3] |
Successful
|
First space station, visited by two crews. First crew failed to dock, second killed after departure
|
22 April 15:30
|
Titan III(23)B
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-4W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 7899 (Gambit-3 4331)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
13 May |
Successful
|
OPS 7899 SRV-1
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
April/May |
Successful
|
OPS 7899 SRV-2
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
May |
Successful
|
Final flight of Titan III(23)B
|
22 April 23:54:06[1]
|
Soyuz
|
|
Baikonur 1/5
|
|
|
Soyuz 10
|
|
Low Earth (Salyut 1)
|
Crewed |
24 April 23:40:00[14] |
Spacecraft failure
|
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts. First mission to dock with a space station, aborted after spacecraft failed to achieve hard dock with Salyut 1
|
23 April 11:30[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 407 (Strela-2M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
24 April 07:32:29
|
Scout B
|
|
San Marco mobile range, Kenya
|
CRS
|
|
San Marco 3
|
CRS / NASA
|
Low Earth
|
Atmospheric |
29 November |
Successful
|
24 April 11:15:02[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 408 (DS-P1-Yu No.37)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
29 December[3] |
Successful
|
28 April 14:35[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 409 (Sfera)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Geodesy |
In orbit |
Successful
|
May
|
5 May 07:43:01
|
Titan III(23)C
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-40
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 3811 (DSP SVN-3/IMEWS-2)
|
US Air Force
|
Geosynchronous
|
Missile defence |
In orbit |
Successful
|
6 May 06:20[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 410 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
18 May[3] |
Successful
|
Nauka 8KS No.1[6]
|
|
Low Earth
|
|
25 May[3] |
Successful
|
7 May 14:20[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 411 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 412 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 413 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 414 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 415 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 416 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 417 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 418 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
9 May 01:11:02
|
Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-36A
|
|
|
Mariner 8
|
NASA
|
Intended: Areocentric
|
Mars orbiter |
9 May |
Launch failure
|
Upper stage thrust vectoring failed due to gyroscope malfunction, failed to orbit
|
10 May 16:58:42[13]
|
Proton-K/D
|
|
Baikonur 81/23
|
|
|
Kosmos 419 (Mars 3MS No.170)
|
|
Intended: Areocentric Achieved: Low Earth
|
Mars orbiter |
12 May[3] |
Launch failure
|
Blok D failed to ignite due to programming error; coast phase incorrectly entered in years instead of hours[15]
|
18 May 08:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 420 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
29 May[3] |
Successful
|
19 May 10:20:00[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 421 (DS-P1-Yu No.48)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
8 November[3] |
Successful
|
19 May 16:22:44[13]
|
Proton-K/D
|
|
Baikonur 81/24
|
|
|
Mars 2 orbiter
|
|
Areocentric
|
Mars orbiter |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Mars 2 lander
|
|
Heliocentric
|
Mars lander |
27 November |
Spacecraft failure
|
Lander failed to achieve soft landing, instead impacting the planet[15]
|
22 May 00:51[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 422 (Tsyklon)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Navigation |
In orbit |
Successful
|
27 May 11:59:55[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 423 (DS-P1-Yu No.47)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
26 November[3] |
Successful
|
28 May 10:30[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Kosmos 424 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
10 June[3] |
Successful
|
28 May 15:26:30[13]
|
Proton-K/D
|
|
Baikonur 81/23
|
|
|
Mars 3 orbiter
|
|
Areocentric
|
Mars orbiter |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Mars 3 lander
|
|
Heliocentric
|
Mars lander |
2 December |
Spacecraft failure
|
Lander failed 20 seconds after landing[15]
|
29 May 03:49[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 425 (Tselina-OM)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
15 January 1980 |
Successful
|
30 May 22:23:04
|
Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-36B
|
|
|
Mariner 9
|
NASA
|
Areocentric
|
Mars orbiter |
In orbit |
Successful
|
First spacecraft to orbit Mars upon orbital insertion on 14 November. Deactivated on 27 October 1972
|
June
|
4 June 18:10:00[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 426 (DS-U2-K No.1)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Magnetospheric |
11 May 2002[3] |
Successful
|
Ceased operations on 12 January 1972
|
6 June 04:55:09[1]
|
Soyuz
|
|
Baikonur 1/5
|
|
|
Soyuz 11
|
|
Low Earth (Salyut 1)
|
Crewed |
29 June 23:16:52[16] |
Spacecraft failure
|
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts. First mission to occupy a space station, and only mission to occupy Salyut 1. Crew killed by depressurisation of spacecraft during reentry
|
8 June 14:00:05
|
Thor LV-2F Burner II
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-10W
|
US Air Force
|
|
SESP-1 (P70-1)
|
US Air Force/STP
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
31 January 1982 |
Successful
|
Final flight of Thor LV-2F Burner II
|
11 June 10:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Kosmos 427 (Zenit-4MK)[17]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
23 June[3] |
Successful
|
15 June 18:41
|
Titan III(23)D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-4E
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 8709 (Hexagon 1201)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
6 August |
Successful
|
OPS 8709 SRV-1
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
20 June[18] |
Partial spacecraft failure
|
OPS 8709 SRV-2
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
26 June[19] |
Successful
|
OPS 8709 SRV-3
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
10 July[19] |
Spacecraft failure
|
OPS 8709 SRV-4
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
15 July[19] |
Successful
|
Maiden flight of Titan IIID, first Hexagon satellite. SRV-1 recovered from water, SRV-3 lost due to parachute failure
|
24 June 07:59[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 428 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
6 July[3] |
Successful
|
Nauka 1KS No.4[6]
|
|
Low Earth
|
|
13 July[3] |
Successful
|
25 June
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Zenit-4M[2]
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
25 June[3] |
Launch failure
|
26 June 23:15:08[6]
|
N1
|
|
Baikonur 110/37
|
|
|
Soyuz 7K-LOK mockup
|
|
Intended: Highly elliptical
|
Test flight |
+51 seconds |
Launch failure
|
LK mockup
|
|
Intended: Highly elliptical
|
Test flight
|
Loss of roll control, vehicle disintegrated at max Q
|
July
|
8 July 22:58:00
|
Scout B
|
|
Wallops LA-3A
|
NASA
|
|
Explorer 44 (Solrad 10)
|
NASA
|
Low Earth
|
Solar |
15 December 1979 |
Successful
|
16 July 01:41:36[1]
|
Vostok-2M
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Meteor 1-09 (Meteor-M)[5][6]
|
|
Sun-synchronous
|
Weather |
27 August 1991[3] |
Successful
|
16 July 10:50
|
Thorad SLV-2H Agena-D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-1W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 8373 ("Heavy Ferret")
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
31 August 1978 |
Successful
|
20 July 10:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 429 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
2 August[3] |
Successful
|
22 July
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Tselina-OM
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
ELINT |
22 July |
Launch failure
|
Failed to orbit
|
23 July 11:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 430 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
5 August[3] |
Successful
|
26 July 13:34
|
Saturn V
|
|
Kennedy LC-39A
|
NASA
|
|
Apollo 15 CSM
|
NASA
|
Selenocentric
|
Lunar orbiter |
7 August 20:45:53 |
Successful
|
Apollo 15 LM
|
NASA
|
Selenocentric
|
Lunar lander |
30 July 22:16:29 |
Successful
|
PFS-1
|
NASA
|
Selenocentric
|
Magnetospheric |
1974 |
Successful
|
Crewed flight with three astronauts, fourth crewed lunar landing and first use of Lunar Roving Vehicle, subsatellite deployed on 4 August at 20:13 UTC
|
28 July 03:29[1]
|
Molniya-M/ML
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Molniya 1-18[20]
|
|
Molniya
|
Communications |
19 July 1977[3] |
Successful
|
30 July 08:29[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 431 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
11 August[3] |
Successful
|
August
|
3 August 11:00:00[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
DS-P1-Yu No.33
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Radar calibration |
+204 seconds |
Launch failure
|
Second stage malfunction, failed to orbit[10]
|
5 August 10:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 432 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
GRU
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
18 August[3] |
Successful
|
7 August 00:11
|
Atlas E/F-OV1-PM
|
|
Vandenberg BMRS-A2
|
US Air Force
|
|
OV1-20
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Ionospheric |
29 August |
Successful
|
OV1-21
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Ionospheric |
29 August |
Successful
|
LOADS-2
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Air density |
31 January 1972 |
Successful
|
RTDS
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Air density |
19 September |
Successful
|
LCS 4
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Air density |
In orbit |
Operational
|
Gridsphere 1 (P70-2/AVL-802)
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
2 November 1979 |
Successful
|
Gridsphere 2 (P70-2/AVL-802)
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
18 March 1979 |
Successful
|
Gridsphere B (P70-2/AVL-802)
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
11 June 1972 |
Successful
|
Rigidsphere (P70-2/AVL-802)
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Air density |
1 September 1981 |
Successful
|
Two OV1 satellites deployed by independent upper stages, LOADS-2 shared upper stage with OV1-20, other payloads shared with OV1-21. All payloads passive other than OV1s.
|
8 August 23:45[9]
|
R-36OM
|
|
Baikonur 191/66
|
|
|
Kosmos 433 (OGCh)
|
RVSN
|
Low Earth
|
FOBS test |
9 August |
Successful
|
Final flight of R-36OM, and FOBS programme
|
12 August 05:30[1]
|
Soyuz-L
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 434 (LK T2K No.3)
|
|
Deployed: Low Earth Final: Medium Earth
|
Test flight |
23 August 1981[3] |
Successful
|
Final flight of Soyuz-L
|
12 August 15:30
|
Titan III(24)B
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-4W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 8607 (Gambit-3 4332)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
3 September |
Successful
|
OPS 8607 SRV-1
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
August |
Successful
|
OPS 8607 SRV-2
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
September |
Successful
|
Maiden flight of Titan III(24)B
|
16 August 18:39:00
|
Scout B-1
|
|
Wallops LA-3A
|
NASA
|
|
Eole
|
CNES
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Maiden flight of Scout B-1
|
19 August
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Zenit-4M[2]
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
19 August |
Launch failure
|
Failed to achieve orbit
|
27 August 10:54:56[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 435 (DS-P1-Yu No.41)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
28 January 1972[3] |
Successful
|
September
|
2 September 13:40:40[13]
|
Proton-K/D
|
|
Baikonur 81/24
|
|
|
Luna 18
|
|
Highly elliptical
|
Lunar sample return |
11 September |
Spacecraft failure
|
Failed to achieve soft landing, instead impacting the moon[21]
|
7 September 01:15[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 436 (Tselina-OM)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
4 January 1980 |
Successful
|
10 September 03:37[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 437 (Tselina-OM)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
29 March 1980 |
Successful
|
10 September 21:33
|
Thorad SLV-2H Agena-D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-3W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 5454 (KH-4B No.1115)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
5 October |
|
OPS 7681 (EHH-B)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
3 February 1976 |
|
14 September 13:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Kosmos 438 (Zenit-4MK)[17]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
23 June[3] |
Successful
|
21 September 12:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 439 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
2 October[3] |
Successful
|
24 September 10:30:00[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 440 (DS-P1-I No.11)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Radar target |
29 October 1972[3] |
Successful
|
28 September 04:00:00
|
Mu-3S
|
|
Kagoshima LA-M
|
ISAS
|
|
Shinsei
|
ISAS
|
Low Earth
|
Solar Ionospheric |
In orbit |
Successful
|
28 September 07:40[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 441 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
10 October[3] |
Successful
|
28 September 10:00:22[13]
|
Proton-K/D
|
|
Baikonur 81/24
|
|
|
Luna 19
|
|
Selenocentric
|
Lunar orbiter |
In orbit |
Successful
|
29 September 09:45:00
|
Delta N
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-17A
|
|
|
OSO-7
|
NASA
|
Low Earth
|
Solar |
9 July 1974 |
Successful
|
TETR-4
|
NASA
|
Low Earth
|
Tracking target |
19 September 1978 |
Successful
|
29 September 11:30[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 442 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
12 October[3] |
Successful
|
October
|
7 October 12:30[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 443 (Zenit-2M)[7]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
19 October[3] |
Successful
|
Nauka 8KS No.2[6]
|
|
Low Earth
|
|
30 October |
Successful
|
13 October 13:41[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 444 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 445 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 446 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 447 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 448 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 449 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 450 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Kosmos 451 (Strela-1M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
14 October 07:51:17
|
Thor LV-2F Burner IIA
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-10W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 4311 (DAPP-5B F-1)
|
US Air Force
|
Low Earth
|
Weather |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Maiden flight of Thor LV-2F Burner IIA
|
14 October 09:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 452 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
27 October[3] |
Successful
|
17 October 13:36
|
Thorad SLV-2G Agena-D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-1W
|
US Air Force
|
|
ASTEX (P71-2)
|
STP
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
In orbit |
Successful
|
19 October 12:40:01[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 453 (DS-P1-Yu No.44)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
19 March 1972[3] |
Successful
|
21 October 11:32:00
|
Delta N6
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-2E
|
|
|
ITOS-B
|
NOAA
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Weather |
21 October |
Launch failure
|
Final flight of Delta N6, oxidiser leak led to premature second stage cutoff. Debris reached orbit, however payload did not
|
23 October 17:01
|
Titan III(24)B
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-4W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 7616 (Gambit-3 4333)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
17 November |
Successful
|
OPS 7616 SRV-1
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
October/November |
Successful
|
OPS 7616 SRV-2
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
Film return |
November |
Successful
|
28 October 04:09:29
|
Black Arrow
|
|
Woomera LA-5B
|
RAE
|
|
Prospero (X-3)
|
RAE
|
Low Earth
|
Technology |
In orbit |
Successful
|
First and only successful British orbital launch, final flight of Black Arrow and last orbital launch from Woomera
|
November
|
2 November 14:25[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 41/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 454 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
16 November[3] |
Successful
|
3 November 03:09:06
|
Titan III(23)C
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-40
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 3431 (DSCS II A1)
|
US Air Force
|
Geosynchronous
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
OPS 9432 (DSCS II A2)
|
US Air Force
|
Geosynchronous
|
Communications |
In orbit |
|
5 November 13:00
|
Europa II
|
|
Kourou BEC
|
ELDO
|
|
STV-4
|
ELDO
|
Intended: Geosynchronous transfer
|
Technology |
5 November |
Launch failure
|
Third stage structural failure. Only flight of Europa II, and final flight of Europa family. Final launch conducted by ELDO, first launch from BEC (later ELA-1 and ELV)
|
15 November 05:52:00
|
Scout B
|
|
San Marco mobile range, Kenya
|
CRS
|
|
Explorer 45 (SSS-A)
|
NASA
|
Medium Earth
|
Magnetospheric |
10 January 1992 |
Successful
|
Final flight of Scout B
|
17 November 11:09:48[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 455 (DS-P1-Yu No.54)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
9 April 1972[3] |
Successful
|
19 November 12:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 456 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
2 December[3] |
Successful
|
20 November 18:00[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 457 (Sfera)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Geodesy |
In orbit |
Successful
|
24 November 09:30[1]
|
Molniya-M/ML
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Molniya 2-01[22]
|
|
Molniya
|
Communications |
10 May 1976[3] |
Successful
|
29 November 10:09:56[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 458 (DS-P1-Yu No.53)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
20 April 1972[3] |
Successful
|
29 November 17:30:00[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 459 (DS-P1-M No.5)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ASAT target |
3 December (destroyed) |
Successful
|
Destroyed by Kosmos 462
|
30 November 16:39[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 460 (Tselina-OM)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
5 March 1980 |
Successful
|
December
|
2 December 08:25:14[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Kapustin Yar 86/4
|
|
|
Interkosmos 5 (DS-U2-IK No.2)
|
Interkosmos
|
Low Earth
|
Ionosphere and magnetosphere research |
7 April 1972[3] |
Successful
|
Cooperative project of Czechoslovakia and the USSR
|
2 December 17:30:01[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 461 (DS-U2-MT No.1)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Micrometeoroid detection gamma-ray astronomy |
21 February 1979[3] |
Successful
|
Ceased operations on 14 December 1972
|
3 December 13:19[9]
|
Tsyklon-2
|
|
Baikonur 90/19
|
|
|
Kosmos 462 (IS-A)
|
|
Low Earth
|
ASAT test |
4 April 1975 |
Successful
|
Intercepted and destroyed Kosmos 459
|
3 December
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Zenit-2M[7]
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
3 December[3] |
Launch failure
|
Nauka 5KS No.2[6]
|
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
|
4 December 22:33
|
Atlas SLV-3A Agena-D
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-13
|
US Air Force
|
|
Canyon
|
US Air Force
|
Intended: Geosynchronous
|
ELINT |
4 December |
Launch failure
|
First stage malfunctioned, failed to orbit
|
5 December 16:20
|
Diamant B
|
|
Kourou ALD
|
CNES
|
|
Polaire
|
CNES
|
Intended: Low Earth
|
Ionospheric |
5 December |
Launch failure
|
Second stage malfunction, failed to orbit
|
6 December 09:50[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 463 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
11 December[3] |
Successful
|
10 December 11:00[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Plesetsk 43/3
|
|
|
Kosmos 464 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
16 December[3] |
Successful
|
11 December 20:47:01
|
Scout B-1
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-5
|
NASA
|
|
Ariel 4
|
SRC
|
Low Earth
|
Ionospheric |
12 December 1978 |
Successful
|
14 December 12:13
|
Thorad SLV-2G Agena-D
|
|
Vandenberg SLC-1W
|
US Air Force
|
|
OPS 7898 Payload 1 (Poppy)
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
In orbit |
Successful
|
OPS 7898 Payload 2
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
In orbit |
Successful
|
OPS 7898 Payload 3
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
In orbit |
Successful
|
OPS 7898 Payload 4
|
NRO
|
Low Earth
|
ELINT |
In orbit |
Successful
|
Final flight of Thorad SLV-2G Agena-D
|
15 December 04:31[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 465 (Tsyklon)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Navigation |
In orbit |
Successful
|
16 December 09:39[1]
|
Voskhod
|
|
Baikonur 31/6
|
|
|
Kosmos 466 (Zenit-4M)[2]
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
18 August[3] |
Successful
|
17 December 10:39:58[4]
|
Kosmos-2I
|
|
Plesetsk 133/1
|
|
|
Kosmos 467 (DS-P1-Yu No.45)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Calibration |
18 April 1972[3] |
Successful
|
17 December 13:00[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Kosmos 468 (Strela-2M)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
19 December 22:50[1]
|
Molniya-M/ML
|
|
Plesetsk 41/1
|
|
|
Molniya 1-19[20]
|
|
Molniya
|
Communications |
13 April 1977[3] |
Successful
|
20 December 01:10:04
|
Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
|
|
Cape Kennedy LC-36A
|
|
|
Intelsat IV F-3
|
Intelsat
|
Geosynchronous
|
Communications |
In orbit |
Successful
|
25 December 11:30[9]
|
Tsyklon-2
|
|
Baikonur 90/20
|
|
|
Kosmos 469 (US-A)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Ocean surveillance |
9 February 1972 |
Successful
|
BES-5 nuclear reactor ejected, and remains in orbit
|
27 December 14:04[1]
|
Soyuz-M
|
|
Plesetsk 43/4
|
|
|
Kosmos 470 (Zenit-4MT)
|
|
Low Earth
|
Optical imaging |
6 January 1972[3] |
Successful
|
Maiden flight of Soyuz-M
|
27 December 19:00:00[8]
|
Kosmos-3M
|
|
Plesetsk 132/2
|
|
|
Oreol 1 (DS-U2-GKA No.1)
|
OKB-586/CNES
|
Medium Earth
|
Magnetospheric |
In orbit |
Successful
|
29 December 10:50:01[1]
|
Vostok-2M
|
|
Plesetsk 41/1
|
|
|
Meteor 1-10 (Meteor-MV)[5][6]
|
|
Sun-synchronous
|
Weather |
In orbit |
Successful
|